At 05:08 PM 6/30/04 +0200, you wrote:
On Wed, 30 Jun 2004, Paul Koning wrote:
Hans> I find it amazing that in the land of
rampant capitalism they
Hans> are unable to see the advantages of selling internationally....
Hans> The eBay "will ship to <insert your country of choice> only"
is
Hans> something I do not understand. Why reduce your potential
Hans> market? An international buyer knows they will have to pay for
Hans> shipping and that might put them off but why shut them out
Hans> completely? The extra hassle of an international shipment
Hans> cannot be that great, at least it isn't in my experience here
Hans> in Europe.
Unfortunately you're mistaken (for the case of exports from the USA).
Shipping things may be easy if you don't bother studying the export
laws, but if you DO make the effort to learn and understand them and
comply, you'll find it is not easy at all.
I spent several days in a course on this topic back in 2000, and
naturally things are more complicated now.
Thats why smart people live in countries
that are less restrictive
on what can be exported "in the People's Best Interest". :)
(no, Hans, France is not one of em either ;-)
Seriously though. Yes, the export stuff is an issue in the U.S.,
although so far, most sellers basically did not want to bother
with the extra forms, the ".. possibility of me having to pay
taxes or duties for your country..." and so on. And, face it,
most U.S. citizens don't even KNOW where, say, Holland is.
(no flames on this last observation, please, flame me off-list
if you feel like it..)
And ya know what? Once I tell em I actually live in the U.S., but
am "sent out" to Europe... they're all of a sudden OK with sending
it to Holland again. Even though they need exact instructions on
how to fill out those damn forms ;-)
Exact instructions? Let's see; shippers name and address (I think they
can figure that one out), Addressies name and address (that shouldn't be
too hard, after all they are mailing the item to them), then name of the
item and it's value (can't be too hard, they did just sell it on E-bay),
next weather it's a gift, sample or merchandise (gee, that's tough but
since they SOLD it I'd say it must be merchandise), then finally sign and
date it. This must be the rough part, they either don't know their own name
or they can't read.
Seriously, what's the difficulty?
Joe
Just my observation, being a multi-country hopper..
--f