What qualifies a "low baller"


I see this often, but when is a bid fit that category?
30%, 40%, 50% off the offered price?
umaasa
you guys are too polite.....

I fully agree with the above posts and follow SDcampbells method of pricing. I take the time to price my items fairly and at or below market and place my ads as FIRM. If I don't get any bites and someone offers $100 or so dollars less, then I may sell, or if I don't get offers, I will often slowly decrease my price. I have sold everything I put for sale here on Audiogon within 7 days, the expection being an amp I have currently for sale, which i felt was going fly outta here in a day.

There was a pretty popular thread here a few days ago, regarding annoying ads....in my opinion, and I kept from posting there, buyers by far can be more annoying than any ad ive read. I think, people have trouble reading ads, does it say FIRM or obo, if it is FIRM, it means unless you want it at the stated price, dont ask questions about price....is there a Big Red "SOLD" icon there?, if so, then no it is no longer for sale. How much does it weigh?, well there is a little window that has the weight of them item. How much is shipping? well, since you are in front of a computer, and the Audiogon peeps, took the time to create a link to UPS, Fedex, USPS, and you as a buyer hopefully know your own zip code, how about putting it in the field and discovering it for yourself?

I am currently receiving emails from someone interested in my amp,....he never returns my emails....he has given me his cell phone,..it is never on, it has no voice mail,,...i have given him my phone #s on several occasions, he has never called me.....i am beginning to think someone I know is playing a joke on me

Wheeeew....that feels better.....
It's a combination of things, as others have said. The most common form of low-baller is somebody who offers 60% of your asking price. I have no problem with somebody asking about getting it at 80% of a competitively priced piece if they explain their offer. Usually, when somebody is wanting to give you 85-90% of what you're asking, they explain their reasoning. Low-ballers tend to ask for 60-70% (and sometimes even much lower) and give no context. -Kirk
No set rules for me, but I don't humor buyers when the offer 20% or less then asking price. Guess I don't deal with that sort of thing to well :) Though once I made an offer on something that was for sale after talking to the fellow for a few days, and it was super low- more like a joke- but he accepted it! I was shocked, almost felt bad too. Answering the question at hand low baller comes into play when the deal is only beneficial to the buyer and seems to be screwing the seller- ie not fair market value. ~Tim
some of these guys are resellers looking to pick up your component very cheaply so they can resell elsewhere at a profit. While their offers are indeed insulting at times, I'll normally politely respond "your offer may be considered if no others are received within a reasonable time, meanwhile please consider a more reasonable offer". So far though I haven't taken any of them, as a legitimate buyer has eventually surfaced every time.
I used to be bothered by bottom feeders but I have come to enjoy the humor and creativity that many evince when forewarding an offer that is truly incredible. Many seem to be lonely and more interested in correspondence than in actually buying anything; some try to use the presumptive close like the one who e-mailed me last week: "What is your best price, I don't have time to haggle and kind of wanted to try your Dyna ST-70 Series 2. When can you ship it?" Excuse me, isn't asking for a best price haggleing?Apparently not on planet Audiogon. Bottom feeders as entertainment.
I too try to price fairly, and when these offers come in I am usually already corresponding with qualified buyers who understand value. But ya gotta laugh to keep from cryin'.