The absertity of high pricing warnings
Had a warning yesterday of a high pricing error. Not a problem; it wasn't an active listing and I can't say I'm particularly concerned with those warnings.
It was inactive because it sold on Amazon a couple of months ago for the price they are telling me is too high.
At present there are no copies of this book on Amazon.
The absertity of high pricing warnings
Had a warning yesterday of a high pricing error. Not a problem; it wasn't an active listing and I can't say I'm particularly concerned with those warnings.
It was inactive because it sold on Amazon a couple of months ago for the price they are telling me is too high.
At present there are no copies of this book on Amazon.
10 replies
Seller_ZVAz3d5lZuGid
Like you, am sure that most of we booksellers are sick of all these supposed high pricing errors. Why can they not just let US decide what price we want to sell at, and not be dictated to by the current market price, especially when older books and they tell us to sell at the original price !
Seller_19xPhE8YgkmxW
Hi Allen
I had one recently - my price of £1.44 was 'too high'.
The reference price was £1.75 - the new price in 1986 - and because Amazon was selling it, there was an assumption that there would be no additional shipping costs...
Of course the earliest you might receive this book was next June - after Amazon had sourced more copies from the publisher!
'Nuff Said!
Brian
Seller_RAXEWLxQ2dbmN
I have also had several recent warnings for books in my inactive inventory.
The high pricing error thing is totally absurd.
It would be ok if it was simply a warning rather than a suppression of the listings in question but that isn't the Amazon way.
It isn't helpful and causes nothing but problems for genuine sellers.
Meanwhile, the real rogues who list phantom duplicates at ludicrously inflated prices continue to get away with actual, deliberate price gouging on an industrial scale.
Seller_N0kQDKMgwda6y
Rubbish, ennit.?
Considering the exorbitant fees we pay we should at least be able to set our own prices without this sort of idiocy.
Seller_AlYpsVHv0gj21
To my mind this is an indication of how Amazon's "bots" are running things. There seem to be very few humans actually doing anything to prevent this sort of thing happening.
Just to go off topic slightly I have said many times over the last 4 or 5 years that a "too low pricing" policy should be enforced. I believe that amazon do have this policy but I dont see any evidence that Amazon enforce it on books. There are still far too many books at ridiculously low prices
Seller_0XWc3TbYeT9US
Best I've had - denied a listing due to high price when I was £80 less than the only other seller - which was Amazon themselves, with no stock and an ETA of four months. Go figure. Or, more accurately, go eBay.