When you accept PayPal on EBAY, as must 90% of the poor souls on EBAY, (Alternatives include cartmanager + Google Checkout):
Cartmanager - how does it work? - Free EBAY, PayPal, Business and Law Forums - Ebay Suspension, PayPal Limited
Cartmanager - authorized reseller - Free EBAY, PayPal, Business and Law Forums - Ebay Suspension, PayPal Limited
You will quickly find that when an EBAY buyer makes a "significantly not as described claim," PayPal often sides with the buyer. It was not always this way. Short of the seller shipping a rock to the buyer (and even then...PayPal often would choose not to get involved), in the past PayPal would simply tell the parties that its job was to verify shipment and nothing else - that they did not get involved in disputes involving the goods themselves.
Of course, over the years this has changed, and today - when it comes to even if all the EBAY buyer claims is that the item was "scratched" or "Not new" or that you somehow misrepresented the listing, PayPal snags the money out of your account (even before deciding against you), and ultimately refunds your hard earned dollars to the buyer with the only condition being that the buyer return the goods to you.
To summarize: nowadays, on EBAY, at the slightest hint of a claim by the EBAY buyer for "significantly not as described" (and sadly, that adverb "significantly" is obviously used loosely), PayPal will:
1. PayPal will "temporarily deduct the disputed amount" from your account. Would that this deduction were but temporary!
2. PayPal will ask for your response to the buyer's "significantly not a described claim"
3. In almost all cases, PayPal will side with the buyer and issue a full refund to them on the condition that the buyer return the item to you, and pay the shipping. (And of course - if your PayPal address is not your own! then this can become a serious problem! for you - which is why you should follow Modee techniques for what kind of address to give PayPal.)
Now there are certain techniques to overcome even these EBAY/PayPal "significantly not as described claims" but they involve some methods that will not be posted in public.
But the point of this post is to explain that when a non-EBAY buyer makes a "significantly not as described" claim, PayPal reverts to the old PayPal rules, and pretty much ignores the buyer, giving him a response something like this:
Dear ____________,
Your buyer has chosen to escalate this dispute to a PayPal claim. By ending
communication with you and escalating to a claim, the buyer is asking
PayPal to investigate the case and decide the outcome. As part of our
investigation, PayPal reviewed any communication you may have had with the
buyer in the Resolution Center
We have received a complaint from a buyer who stated that merchandise you
sent them did not match your original description. The buyer is disputing
the quality of goods associated with the transaction detailed below.
As you may already be aware, PayPal's Buyer Complaint Policy applies only
to the shipment of goods and not to complaints about the attributes or
quality of goods received through an eBay transaction. Therefore, we will
not conduct an investigation into this matter at this time.
We do, however, reserve the right to begin an investigation within 180 days
if we determine it is necessary.
Now - do you see what I am saying? Same company, same PayPal, exact same type of dispute - and when the dispute has anything to do with EBAY, fasten your seatbelts because some funds are about to be whisked out of your account.
But if the dispute involves your own website, and not EBAY: the response comes in: "As you may already be aware, PayPal's Buyer Complaint Policy applies only
to the shipment of goods and not to complaints about the attributes or
quality of goods received through an eBay transaction."
Cartmanager - how does it work? - Free EBAY, PayPal, Business and Law Forums - Ebay Suspension, PayPal Limited
Cartmanager - authorized reseller - Free EBAY, PayPal, Business and Law Forums - Ebay Suspension, PayPal Limited
You will quickly find that when an EBAY buyer makes a "significantly not as described claim," PayPal often sides with the buyer. It was not always this way. Short of the seller shipping a rock to the buyer (and even then...PayPal often would choose not to get involved), in the past PayPal would simply tell the parties that its job was to verify shipment and nothing else - that they did not get involved in disputes involving the goods themselves.
Of course, over the years this has changed, and today - when it comes to even if all the EBAY buyer claims is that the item was "scratched" or "Not new" or that you somehow misrepresented the listing, PayPal snags the money out of your account (even before deciding against you), and ultimately refunds your hard earned dollars to the buyer with the only condition being that the buyer return the goods to you.
To summarize: nowadays, on EBAY, at the slightest hint of a claim by the EBAY buyer for "significantly not as described" (and sadly, that adverb "significantly" is obviously used loosely), PayPal will:
1. PayPal will "temporarily deduct the disputed amount" from your account. Would that this deduction were but temporary!
2. PayPal will ask for your response to the buyer's "significantly not a described claim"
3. In almost all cases, PayPal will side with the buyer and issue a full refund to them on the condition that the buyer return the item to you, and pay the shipping. (And of course - if your PayPal address is not your own! then this can become a serious problem! for you - which is why you should follow Modee techniques for what kind of address to give PayPal.)
Now there are certain techniques to overcome even these EBAY/PayPal "significantly not as described claims" but they involve some methods that will not be posted in public.
But the point of this post is to explain that when a non-EBAY buyer makes a "significantly not as described" claim, PayPal reverts to the old PayPal rules, and pretty much ignores the buyer, giving him a response something like this:
Dear ____________,
Your buyer has chosen to escalate this dispute to a PayPal claim. By ending
communication with you and escalating to a claim, the buyer is asking
PayPal to investigate the case and decide the outcome. As part of our
investigation, PayPal reviewed any communication you may have had with the
buyer in the Resolution Center
We have received a complaint from a buyer who stated that merchandise you
sent them did not match your original description. The buyer is disputing
the quality of goods associated with the transaction detailed below.
As you may already be aware, PayPal's Buyer Complaint Policy applies only
to the shipment of goods and not to complaints about the attributes or
quality of goods received through an eBay transaction. Therefore, we will
not conduct an investigation into this matter at this time.
We do, however, reserve the right to begin an investigation within 180 days
if we determine it is necessary.
Now - do you see what I am saying? Same company, same PayPal, exact same type of dispute - and when the dispute has anything to do with EBAY, fasten your seatbelts because some funds are about to be whisked out of your account.
But if the dispute involves your own website, and not EBAY: the response comes in: "As you may already be aware, PayPal's Buyer Complaint Policy applies only
to the shipment of goods and not to complaints about the attributes or
quality of goods received through an eBay transaction."
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