![]() ![]() If you bid too low in the last few seconds, chances are you'll lose and not be able to bid again but if you bid a large number you've got the same chance at winning as you would when sniping - and save the sniping fee. 3 employees: 300 listings a week got me 75k. 2 employees: 200 listings a week got me 50k. 1 employee: 100 listings a week got me 25k. Except I had a 3 month instance of the following. I lost but it proves that you can manually bid in the closing few seconds of the auction and be accepted. I seem to hit this invisible wall of 50k sales a month when I have 200 listings a week and two employees. Sniper, Sniping, Bidder, Automatic Snipe. Regarding "anything under 10 seconds.", on a recent auction I manually bid in the last few seconds (by watching the eBay countdown clock) and my bid came in literally 1 second before the item ended. Free online service that places bids on eBay in the closing seconds. That's why people pay money to snipe - they are prepared to pay extra to have a better chance of winning. IMO, the idea of sniping is to win the auction and beat all bidders. ![]() Snipes at the last moment are likely to be rejected because you have to beat ALL the other people by at least one bid increment. However, Gixen is FREE Goofbid costs £2.99 a month and quite frankly, even if they were both free I would give a slight preference to Gixen, so it’s an easy decision: WINNER GIXEN. The idea of sniping is to beat nibble bidders, not other snipers.Īnything under 10 seconds will not allow nibble bidders enough time to have another attempt to outbid you. Gixen wins out on simplicity and ease of use but Goofbid has a nicer design and some people might find the ads on Gixen too obtrusive.
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