Lessons Learned

When buying this season, make sure that you check the feedback of the seller that you’re thinking of spending your hard earned money on. When there are negatives present sometimes it’s a simple misunderstanding but if you see a trend, do think twice.

To paraphrase my experience, I purchased items from a seller that did a “bait and switch” and gave me a product smaller and worth less value than what I paid. Even with my prior contact before the sale, this seller intentionally withheld information about the current stock that she had and let me checkout anyway. After waiting over 2 weeks patiently (BTW this seller lives 2 hours away and I believe she didn’t ship the package when stated) I opened my envelope to find something that I did not order. There wasn’t a packing slip, invoice, or note included in the envelope..just handwritten on the plastic bag in sharpie, “These smaller so more”. So you can imagine my being upset after waiting over 2 weeks for a local seller to ship me items that I did not order.

When I contacted this seller she was defensive and blamed me for not reading her policies, as well as calling me various names and speaking to me in a condescending manner. I later found out she’s a Bay Area dentist (business must not be so good if she’s selling supplies) and she may feel she’s above everyone else, so no wonder many customers that left negative feedback for her shop also mentioned the condescending attitude.  For Etsy this is against their TOU for any seller on their site. You simply cannot change someone’s order at will if it’s not what’s in the listing that the customer paid for, period.

Etsy’s TOU

4. Listing and Selling

Listing Description: By listing an item on the Site you warrant that you and all aspects of the item comply with Etsy’s published policies. You also warrant that you may legally sell the item. You must accurately describe your item and all terms of sale in your Etsy shop. Your listings may only include text descriptions, graphics, pictures and other content relevant to the sale of that item. All items must be listed in an appropriate category with appropriate tags. Each listing must accurately and completely describe the item/items for sale in that listing. If the “in stock” quantity is more than one, all items in that listing must be identical. Each unique item must have its own listing.”

So the lesson here boys and girls is:

1} Do read as MANY of the feedback’s left for the Seller as well as what they leave for their customers. How they leave feedback speaks volumes about their character and integrity.

2} If they have over 50 negatives that should make you worry, over 100 should make you run.

3} If someone does a “bait and switch” do contact Etsy since it’s against their TOU to list something and send another product in its place.

4} If you receive something not as described do try to open a Paypal dispute.

5} If Paypal fails go straight to your credit card and proceed with a chargeback. Most credit cards have buyer protections in place.

Happy Holidays!!

I’ve decided to revise my post because Etsy handled it! I guess they figured it was bad enough she was dishonest and her slapping me with retaliatory negative feedback was unwarranted.  I was angry and disappointed that I was cheated and then blamed for it  that I wanted to warn everyone about situations like this but honestly I really don’t want to read this post months later and feel that anger again so I’ve revised it to stick to the facts. :}

Bookmark and Share

Bookmark and Share

{ 2 comments }

I’ve been in the jewelry biz for a while. I started in 04′, after attending my first jewelry party and getting excited I jumped in with zest and zeal and bought every book that I could get my hands on in order for me to learn metalworking. I’ve done some stupid things in my time as a jeweler and can say that I’m blessed to still have all of my fingers and no 3rd degree burns to speak of. lol

My jewelry has evolved and as I worked from medium to medium my tastes would change and I would no longer be satisfied with my current work. The good thing about having a personality like this is that I never settle. In fact I’m like this with all things. From my teaching myself to build a computer from a motherboard, chip and an empty case, to taking on large home projects, I feel this is what keeps me truly feeling alive.

I’ve found that I still at times make mistakes which end up being very, very costly. My biggest mistake set me back by a couple grand because I took on a task that I should have thought twice about. It’s made me sit back and think about what I’ve been doing with my jewelry line and what needs to still be changed. I realized that I simply cannot cater to everyone and that I need to just say no. I also need to pare down my line a little more to where it’s manageable and only create pieces that I have 1000% confidence in fabricating. I’ve already turned away many buyers in the span of 2 weeks all either wanting items that I no longer make, or wanting so many changes it would cut into the time needed to create it and my current workload won’t allow it. In the past I would never say no, I would just take every single order and end up stressed and unhappy and the whole point of me doing this is to do what I love doing. I’m going to start offering much less on my site because I want to only focus on what I love making. Offering less items will help me get a little more focused and not leave me as frazzled.

This ring was worth every second that I spent on it but next time I think I'm going to carve it in wax and have it cast.

I’m hoping that my transition to offering less items won’t be much of a shock. I’ll still be offering my top sellers on my website but I want to work more with colored Sapphires, Tourmaline and Rose Cut Diamonds so my focus needs to be on that goal. I also have a MASSIVE amount of stones that I plan on working through so a lot of 1 of a kind rings and pendants will be coming out soon.

Wish me luck. :)

Bookmark and Share

{ 2 comments }

Update your blog links to …Anything Indie, since I have closed my account with Typepad and moved to WordPress. Typepad let someone take over my old account business name from my 2 year old blog and let them put up spam links to their own site. It was pointed out to me tonight by Delia who happened to have my old blog link address.

The proper site link is: http://www.anythingindie.com/. Please update accordingly or your blog readers will end up at a spam page that Typepad let some stranger open under the guise of my business name. Word of warning..I had my Typepad account for about 2+ years (pro account) and the second you decide to close your account they will let anyone take over your name. Be forewarned. I guess this is a tactic that Typepad uses to keep its users on their site. You’re too scared to leave for fear that anyone will get the opportunity to open up a new account under your business name. Nice.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Bookmark and Share

{ 3 comments }