Archive for May, 2008

AutoExtra.com dealers your free ride is over

AutoExtra is putting an end to their free basic listing service on June 1st. Their reasoning behind this decision is that the percentage of dealers using free listings that converted to paying customers was low.

If any affected dealers would like to advertise their inventory for free on my sites instead, please contact me. I feel the more cars I have the better user experience I can provide to shoppers. Perhaps I am crazy.

Vimeo is better than YouTube

The choice is clear.

eBay Vehicle Protection Program scam

A new type of escrow scam is showing up on most of the east coast craigslist motorcycle boards. This scheme will advertise a great deal to elicit lots of responses, and each responder gets a few bait emails explaining that the item is “in eBay’s hands” because a previous sale there was not completed.

Lately, scammers are posting with gmail addresses that almost always contain a first name. After a potential target responds to the ad, the gmail address is abandoned. I have seen this trend in real estate as well. This particular scammer used cametamegastore1@cametastock.com to send these emails to me in an auto-responder fashion after I contacted him. No matter what my emails contained, these three messages came from the scammer as immediate responses in this order:

First of all, please DO NOT REPLY at this e-Mail if you don’t have the amount available, or if you don’t intend to be serious.
I’m from Orlando, Florida.
This is the second time when I try to sell the motorcycle. First time I tried eBay.
Because all the time I use only 100% safe methods I sent the motorcycle through eBay Vehicle Protection Program to a buyer from Alaska.
I paid all the shipping fees from my money and when the eBay have requested the payment the seller have refused to pay because he don’t have the full amount.
Now I have the motorcycle in the eBay hands and is ready to be delivered to the next buyer.
If you want to purchase it and only if you are a serious buyer then send me your complete name and address for shipping.
The time delivery will be only 3 days and the motorcycle will be delivered at your home address full registered in your state and under your name.

This scam appears to be sophisticated for a few reasons. Above all, eBay does have a Vehicle Protection Program that was designed to shield buyers from scam artists on eBay Motors. After some quick searches, a shopper could be falsely convinced that this program exists as a transaction escrow service instead of just a monetary guarantee. Also, the ad text itself plays on a buyer’s emotions. This seller appears to be frustrated with dead-beat buyers and tire kickers, which is a typical grief that one-time sellers profess in their listings.

The second email…

The bike is in perfect condition. Full working. The technical inspection has been made 3 weeks ago.
Now the motorcycle is in the eBay hands and not in my possession it. If you will not like it and you will decide to return it then you will receive the full refund. If you will decide to buy it then eBay will release the funds to me.
If you agree with the terms then send me your complete name, address FAX number and I’ll redirect the motorcycle to you.
I’ll wait for your reply!

Regards!

…and the third email…

eBay Protection Program help the sellers and buyers to stay safe with all the transactions.

How it works:
1. The seller ships the goods to eBay. They will inspect the goods and will contact you through email with the payment details.
2. You will send the payment to eBay.
3. After eBay will confirm your payment they will delivery you the goods in 3 days.
4. As soon as you will receive and you will inspect it if all will be ok and if you will decide to keep it then eBay will release the funds to me. If not you will receive the full refunds and the goods will be returned to me.

Tips that will save you from this scam:

  1. eBay does not handle merchandise or hold and release funds
  2. make sure the email address on the ad listing and the one you communicate with are the same
  3. avoid shipping, deal locally, and meet the seller in person

Google Base traffic spike

Anyone else experience this traffic spike from Google base?

Google Base Traffic Spike

The good news is that since the outage the incoming traffic has hit a record high.

HTML in craigslist ad postings

A new fefo on cl was started to gather responses to the proposed limits to the HTML tags that can be used in cl postings. Like most other forums, it has been taken over by trolls, spammers and perverts. I left a response yesterday that is fourth paging now, so I thought I would point it out here.

Craigslist TOU friend or foe

I was searching this morning to find some information I needed for a conference call about Craigslist today. I will discuss some of the things I learned later. While searching, I happened upon a neat group of sites that I would like to share. It seems that when Craig wrote the Craigslist terms of use, he nailed it.

The terms are so good, in fact, that when some other businesses read his terms, they immediately copy and paste them to their own website without replacing every instance of “craigslist” with their own name.

Websites that stole Craig’s terms of use

  • http://www.indiaclassy.com/terms.html
  • http://www.curdy.com/terms-of-use.html
  • http://www.juliesbarn.com/home/?view=terms&cityid=-55
  • http://www.dateilicious.com/Terms.php
  • http://www.rockstarrecruiting.com/corp/terms
  • http://www.worldpropertyservices.com/terms.cfm
  • http://www.aiscolorado.org/termsofuse.htm
  • http://www.campusmonster.org/terms/
  • http://classifiedtree.com/rptcontentmgmt.aspx?inid=7
  • http://www.yokepal.com/terms_of_services.php
  • http://www.internationalgcl.com/terms.php
  • http://iannouncethis.com/terms-of-use.html
  • http://yodoleslist.com/terms.htm

The list goes on and on and on. I am stunned by the amount of half-assed companies that are too lazy to do a simple find and replace after taking someone else’s work.

Friend or Foe?

Craigslist is a game changer. Dealers that have never heard of CL are stunned to hear that it is a free service that can get 1,000 people to view a car classified ad in a single day. However, in its present form, craigslist will not change the automotive industry. Imagine a day where as many dealers that refresh their listings on Autotrader can do the same thing on craigslist. Mayhem. The (lack of) search features on CL prevent thousands of new items in a single day to be properly sorted and consumed by shoppers.

The wall that holds back this onslaught of ads is the terms of service. Dealers rely on third parties to distribute their ads, and craigslist does not permit third parties to create ads. This makes the craigslist terms of service a huge road block for a lot of companies like mine.

I see it differently. The TOU is what enables me to succeed on the site. It protects the listings I create from the onslaught of violators and spammers. If you take the time to read the terms and become a regular user of the site it is not long before you can make the posting process more efficient without violating the mighty posting agent section of the terms.

Take aways

I learned a few things today. First, there is always someone out there with a sloppy written program that gives me clues on how to automate tasks. For example, one of the people in the conference call today mentioned he can combat competitors that relentlessly flag your legit ads to hurt your business. I had not considered a flagging bot until this was said, but a simple search turns up Craig’s Flagger, a program that automates the process of terminating any ad posted by a spammer. It does not work. No surprise. Put a tool like this out in the open that can easily be identified after it starts flagging at the click of a button.

I also learned that keyword stuffing still works to this day. I see ads that have random chunks of other web pages at the bottom. Thomas Jefferson quotes, UNIX user manual sections, you name it and someone has surely used it to trip up the CL filters.

The most exciting thing about today’s conference was I found out that my tactics are still a cut above the rest. I was fairly convinced when I noticed a couple competitors redesigning their ad designs to be 90% copies of mine, but today I was stunned to see one of the most sophisticated craigslist programs I have demoed to date–one capable of completely automatic daily posting without the risk of detection as a single source–struggling with the filters (see previous paragraph).

Is the craigslist terms of use friend or foe? What does that tell you about your commitment to craigslist success?