The biggest thing you said was the fact that you had 100% positive feedback. It doesn't matter to any selling platform, eBay and Mercari too. You can do everything in your power to be the best seller possible and buyers can still do whatever they want. They think the buyers need to be kept happy first and foremost but without quality sellers, their platform will die.
And what is worse is somehow Chinese sellers Mainly E--bay can get away with delaying an item and sending a small piece of Junk to fill the void of not having the item sent in time whereas a normal seller in USA this would not be allowed to happen. Sad part is I ordered from a person who is in the USA buying the items from China and sending them to me, the guy got a spare in the meantime junk item that he did not want and sent it to me. I ordered aluminum arrows $30 for 6 made from a specific brand in China and while waiting got a monocular worth $5 and they said it would be a $10 minimum value spotting scope. Then when I did get my arrows late by 4 months from when I should have got them the first time, they sent very similar arrows from a different brand aluminum of course, just lots of the parts are identical like the nocks or the grade of aluminum used but the fact this arrow had no markings and thinner foam rubber fletching/similar to feathers was a true indication the Chinese seller changed companies that made the arrows to sellers. This came out fine since both arrows are so similar with other then the one set having the writing the main difference was the arrows foam rubber fletching/similar to feathers, but it could have been worse in that I could have got arrows that are heavier or different amount of spine flex= how much an arrow flexes.
Yes, otherwise it will be mostly people selling cheap knockoffs that nobody buys after a bit or buy them knowing what they are to save money and quality will vary from the Chinese seller's people are buying from as some do not do quality control on the items they sell.
it is such exhaustive dance these platforms have to engage in. I guess they don't feel they can just put a an exhaustive list of rules for returns and disagreements and then abide by that set of rules, and lock everybody's money in escrow until whatever the waiting period is that the seller has established. Don't take any sides, and review the actual facts of the disagreement.
Should I find myself in the market to sell a guitar or acquire another, you will be the only person I talk to, thank you Jeremy for what you bring to the market!
Jeremy, my friend. You have just perfectly stated the importance of authenticity from both sides of the musical instrument buying and selling experience. Thank you, brother. You are a gentleman and a scholar. 🙏🏼💙💯
I listed some of my gear on Reverb and was surprised by the fees. Wow! I've moved my more expensive gear to local channels like Craig's List and consigned at my local music shop. It's worked out much better. My local music shop gets a sizeable chunk but at least it's going to a Mom-and-Pop store and not to Etsy.
@@carvinblack Reverb has the right to charge whatever they feel they can get away with but the increase in fees after the Etsy purchase has made them less affordable for most of my gear, especially, the more expensive gear. That's the advice to sellers; if you need the world-wide market place then Reverb has value but if you can sell locally then you can do better.
If I had a Ma/Pa store that would sell my stuff on consignment, I'd be so happy! I agree with you in going that route and supporting your local place (if you can). Makes for a fun guitar shop for everyone too!
@@schreds8882 Reverb exists only for profit anyway. Local business has come local ties. Reverb and whatever ever giant corp will do whatever it takes, including bullying people. It's a shame.
I will NEVER use Reverb again. I should have read the reviews about Reverb prior. My bad. Sold a beautiful Gibson 339 for approximately $2300. By the time Reverb got their fees, I ended up with $1940. $360 to facilitate the transaction, pay their mandatory insurance, bump fees (whatever they are) and blah, blah. Never again. Using CL or Marketplace and I've become very versed of how the thieves, scammers and tire kickers work.
I know I’m late on this…but good video. I do remember your older video. I completely agree. It’s really the lack of informed buyers and those with buyers remorse. And every time (with most platforms) they side with the buyer. Reverb is still great. I refused to sell on Craigslist after a year ago. Its really a bummer (meaning the people) but you have to keep adapting. Good honest information from your video. Thanks for the content.
I hate that you had this experience, and understand you don't want such negativity to be your biggest drawing video...but it is how I (and many, many people) found you - celebrate all victories!
My problem reverb is it’s so damn hard to find individual used guitars. It’s flooded with new in box stuff from major retailers selling for more than msrp. It’s also pretty cool that I’ve watched several hours of your content and have never heard you shill your own personal sales platform.
I had some similar experiences on eBay with vintage amps about ten years ago and stopped selling. What a shame because I really enjoyed buying, bringing the amps back into working order (I had a tech do the work) and selling at a small profit after enjoying the amps. Those were the days....
. . . One of - no , THE biggest lie ever stated ... ' The customer is always right '. They are on occasions incorrect , uninformed , and unaware and not-at-all worth ' k n o w i n g '. I am being polite .
In all of the situations you describe (except the 12 string), Reverb has been the problem. If they look at a listing and the guitar was accurately described then they are just creating and cultivating an environment where sellers get screwed. Dispute resolution should be fair, and clearly they've take a different approach. I'm not sure what they hope to gain, but 4 of those 5 sellers now feel that they can return anything for any reason. It's not supposed to work that way. If you don't demand honesty and accountability from buyers and sellers then it degrades the whole business.
Thank you for the update. You state things very well. I have used reverb for the past 5 years. I buy to try something out. I may keep a while, then sell and try something else, or keep it in my collection, not to flip it. I too have had a couple of incidents on reverb, with no recourse for me. Keep up the good work and thank you!
Glad to see that there are still some people who have ethics and morals. The music industry has notoriously attracted vultures who will prey upon any and all who get close. You are a breath of fresh air and I would definitely buy from you. 👍👍🤘🤘
I 100% agree with you with regard to vintage equipment. My thing is vintage amps and when I acquire one, I expect it to not work. These things come with so many issues that I'd never ever consider selling one online. Those old amps are stuffed full of parts that wear out. Tubes wear out, speaker paper wears out, voice coils can wear out, the capacitors wear out and the heating of the resistors wildly changes their value over time. The pots go scratchy too - almost forgot about that.
You are my kind of guitar guy. I love old guitars that have been there and done that. My newest instrument is 40 years old, my oldest 84. I've bought new guitars and sold them within a few years. I will be in the market for another guitar within the next year and will be looking at what you have to offer!
Reverb is great for selling used guitar pedals and things in that smaller size and price range that you just want to get rid off... but Reverb is terrible for the big ticket items like vintage guitars they will severely rip you off 😩
I sold one guitar (a 22' Les Paul Modern ) on Reverb a few months ago and I took a big hit with all the fees. Just given the fees, I don't see how anyone could make a worthwhile profit selling guitars on reverb these days. That said, echoing what you said in the original vid on this subject, it is a great resource for finding that special guitar you're looking for. I can spend hours looking. I also like to use it to get a sense of how much a guitar sells for in the used market.
Thank you for your honesty and clarity. I knew reverb got percentage but not close to ten percent. It’s not worth the aggravation and anxiety that ensues.
I sold a Marshall Origin 20 amp head to a terrible buyer in Florida. It was basically a brand new amp because I plugged it in, played it and didn't like it. I packaged the amplifier as if it was going overseas. Even bought extra cushioning material to ensure the travel was going to be safe. He receive it and damaged the amp purposely (because he didn't like the amp). He used a flathead screw driver to pop a little piece of the piping off. His excuses was that, "I only like pristine conditioned items in my collection". Luckily the person from Reverb who helped me with the claim knew what he did because he also scratched the face plate while messing with the piping. They paid for the shipping back to me. I glued the piping down with super glue (which the buyer didn't want to do himself) and sold the amp for more locally. Even though they helped me that one time, Reverb is just another large piece of corporate crap at this point.
I happened across an SG with a crazy thin neck back around '90.It was so narrow that it made it tough for me to chord, but it was great for small hands.Every other good quality ever attributed to SG's, - sustain, clarity, beautifully worn cherry ,- never seen another like it. Hooked up the seller with a young woman starting a Alt band; she has since changed career paths, but says she will give it to her daughter, and would never sell it. Right instrument for the right person; I've a purple, maple FB Strat that is like that, that: just does my " thing". Done a lot of used pedals buys through Reverb; never had any problems, - knock on wood.I don't think they allow for the kind of wriggle room you'd need to mutually profit, especially with all the OCD cases and two bit hustlers & grifters in the game.Many of the shop owners I know give on line sales a low priority because of it.
Interesting video. I have had very good luck with the two guitars I purchased on Reverb (1969 Martin D12-20 and 2018 Martin Model America 1). I haven't sold anything (yet), but you've brought up some really good information - thanks!
Not just reverb - have come across several sites that start out with low fees, good conditions etc but after 5-10 years are now high fees, no responsibility, cash cows for second owners. Everything changes given time so the answer is to use them while still good but be prepared to ditch when fees start going up etc.
I have been trying to find somebody to start a platform with me to try to sink reverb that website has got so ridiculous on their advertisement when you go to sell a guitar now there can't be nothing in the background showing another piece of musical gear or it will automatically halt the process I have over 50 personal guitars that I've been trying to sell everything from Gibson SGS to switch vibracells I actually have the last SG that Tom Murphy put his hands on before leaving Gibson to open up the Gibson custom shop and you definitely sir is somebody that I would do business with or consider going in business with I've been with you since you've had 3,000 subscribers but under my wife's account LOL hang in there we will get there
I've had one issue selling a guitar on Reverb, it was obviously heavily damaged in transit. reverb was great and worked out the entire problem with the buyer even though I was prepared to have to take it back and deal with the repair. The problem is their fees keep going up and up, they make money on sales tax, insurance (which they require for sales over $1500) and bumps are a complete waste of money. And the net effect is that it is driving the market prices of guitars higher. Now everyone local wants to price based on inflated Reverb pricing.
I will say that I have had Reverb back me as a seller in certain situations. One was when I had a seller cuss me out and threaten me for shipping a pedal with Reverb protection because he wasn’t home when the post came. The buyer then tried to return it before he even received it after he got in trouble with Reverb. I’ve also had them back me when someone wanted to return a delay because it “wasn’t for them.” I think if you making sure your listing has the “as described” box checked you are more protected as a seller. Totally agree that the fees have gotten crazy and that the quality of buyers have gone down since fee increase. I am curious what other folks are doing to sell their gear.
I hate all that happened to you but many of the issues you mentioned have also happens to me. I was an early adopter and huge fan and moved away from eBay. I made nice money in my flips versus selling to dealers but things changed. Selling guitars there is like Craigslist. The buyers changed and the knowledge base went bad and fast. The fees also are crazy high. I buy in there but not selling anymore. Too much stress and hassle. Nice video.
I have been flipping guitars for over just over 2 years now. Well over 700 at this point. Mostly ones under $500 but some for much more. It's great because I get to play lots of guitars that I wouldn't get to otherwise and because I make a profit on 98-99% of them, my wife doesn't give me a hard time about what I spend on guitars. I have sold most locally on FB and CL but 60-70 on Reverb. I have had a few issues where I gave a partial refund or took a couple back because of something I didn't catch. I have made enough from this that when it does happen, I kinda view it as play or Monopoly money and that I'll make it back up eventually. I can see how you might stress out over the high end stuff though. When I first started, I found a 1964 Guild archtop for $200. It was left-handed and I wasn't sure that it would sell very easily. I posted it on Reverb for $895 and then posted it on CL. In the time it took me to do that, about 3 minutes, it had sold on Reverb. That got me hooked. Have had a few other ones like that but mostly I make $40-$100. Selling is fun, but the thrill of the hunt is the best part.
Great tips! I've always had good luck in LA with craigslist since there's so many musicians here. But I have several vintage guitars, amps, and keyboards that I am going to put on the market soon. I think I'll avoid Reverb. But sounds like buying on Reverb is a good thing - just much of the vintage gear is way overpriced.
I have never shopped or sold on Reverb. Didn't really trust it when it launched, but I really didn't have too much to off-load anyway. I have sold a few things on ebay in the past but it has been 3 years since doing any of that. At this stage, if I have something to sell, it will be local...like Brad said below
@@rosewoodsteel6656 of course….The shops themselves will often offer up a lower price as soon as you speak to them. You don’t have the Reverb protection so you have to make sure you are dealing with reputable shops
I can only speak to my experience. I’ve sold about 40-50 items on reverb consisting mostly of electric guitars and pedals. I’ve never had an issue with a buyer. I would guess that it’s easier to safely sell electric guitars vs acoustic guitars though. On the flip side, I’ve purchased plenty of gear on Reverb as well. I’ve had one situation where an item was not aa described and Reverb refunded me which was obviously from my perspective the right thing to do. It was a midi controller and it showed up with a hairy piece of chewing gum stuck to the bottom of it (not disclosed or photoed). Reverb has been a fantastic tool for me as a seller and I continue to use them to this day. That said, I agree it’s expensive and if I had a better way to sell gear at good prices with less fees, I’d do it. But Reverb is still the best way for me to connect with real buyers so I continue to use them. Reverb does deliver value for a seller and that value can’t be free. They put themselves in the middle of these transactions and add legitimacy for buyers so it’s only fair they charge for that value. The bottom line for me is that I trust Reverb way more than I trust eBay so pick your poison. The fees are tough to swallow but if we could sell gear at good prices in a reasonable timeline without Reverb we would but we can’t so we don’t. If you can find a way to build your own legitimacy and market online, all the power to you. You found a way to circumvent those fees. Most non-dealers don’t have the means to do that though.
Something similar happened to me and I don't use Reverb anymore either. I sold a 40 y.o. Rick 330-12 for $1700 with the case. The buyer tried to get me to take $400 off but before I got to the email he told Reverb it wasn't in the condition it was advertised. Anyway, he shipped it back to me at Reverb's expense and Reverb told me I had 2 weeks to pay them back. After numerous emails back and forth proving the guitar was properly photographed and described they still sided with the buyer. So I cancelled the CC I had in with Reverb. The locked my account for about 6 months and now I see it is mysteriously open. I am not a thief yet the will not answer me so I can return their money less shipping on this horrific transaction.
I really liked Reverb when I first found it a number of years ago but it has gotten problematic the past couple of years. The fees keep going up and up as well. I haven’t sold anything on there in a few years and I’ve only bought a few things like tuners, bridges, pedals etc.
I still buy and sell the odd pedal on reverb. I generally list everything for top dollar on reverb than make sure I have a gumtree and marketplace ads to allow lower cost options to be discussed. Reverb has its place but it’s pretty much eBay like at this point.
I had a similar experience selling a guitar on reverb that ended up in me telling them to delete my account (I had sold quite a bit on there as well). It was another one of those instances where they, of course, sided with the buyer. Long story, but it was my word against his, so naturally, I had to give the money back. I now only sell through fb marketplace. I don't regret leaving at all.
I’ve sold a lot on reverb and bought a number things. It’s not a music store. Pictures and descriptions should be like you’re selling to a neighbor or friend be honest 100% more pictures and you think you need, do a demo video and answer every question. The item should sell itself. So sorry you had a rough time, Especially when it comes from more than one item, no one deserves that. Sometimes bad things happen to good people.
I had similar with eBay. Sold a messner pedal, buyer said it was damaged and had a weird noise. I always test stuff and film it before I ship and it was fine. I paid for and arranged return. Thankfully when it came back it was fine, I suspect the buyer had cheap power supply. I was happy to refund less the return postage. In spite of me having before and after video of the pedal working perfectly eBay said there was no way they could determine the condition of the item pre sale. So I had to suck it up, it was only £5 but that wasn't the point. The reality is both eBay and Reverb have far more buyers than sellers so they will always look after that end of the market. In addition they can bully the seller and hold them to ransom IE "we will delete your account if you don't do what we say". Unfortunately it is a trend we are seeing with big tech generally. Many are operating like autocratic firms of gangsters, shaking down their community members, the comparisons, when you look at it are pretty stark.
I have a signature KISS guitar I was going to sell on reverb but I’m spooked now. I’ll try local ads. Plus it’s a used guitar I’ve paid taxes why should I pay taxes again? Also I read they take 5% plus processing fees but the processing fee amt isn’t listed. Plus taxes and adding reverb’s protection and finally plus shipping. How do sellers make a profit after all that?
I had a similar experience with a sale but a vastly different outcome from Jeremy. Sold a 2013 D-28 Authentic 1941 on Reverb; buyer gets it and found an extremely small surface scratch on the back - I mean you couldnt see it unless the light hit just right. Immediately the buyer comes at me saying he is going to sue if I didnt give him his money back and being really belligerent. I refunded the buyer and he sent me the guitar back. A couple of weeks later I got a credit back to my account for the full amount that I refunded the seller. Worked out extremely well for me but I have to imagine that had to of been an oversight.
I’ve bought and sold many items on Reverb. I’ve had to resolve a couple things with a buyer before and a couple times with a seller. Never had to have Reverb step in to intervene. I’ve found it easier to sell on Reverb than locally just due to # of people potentially interested. Allows me to buy new gear I’d like and I typically position myself to make a profit.
Yep, and if you start another account but use your original email they will let you. So weird. I work with some food delivery apps, and they operate in a similar way to selling apps. And there you have it, most of our lives are run on apps. Discusting😢. I wish i had not been one of the millions asking for star trek tech in the 70s...
i dont sell whole guitars, just parts - i make sales on ebay constantly, but for the 8 months that i had a reverb account, i did not sell one single item.. it didnt help that reverb would de-list my items for not selling... smh
I'm in the middle of EXACTLY THIS with them on an $1800 vintage mic where the buyer clearly did not read my accurate description. It's infuriating. A month on from the refund request - that I am refusing - and I'm sitting waiting for a response from "support" for 7 days. SEVEN DAYS with no communication after laying out all of the facts. I'm over it. Really sad and frustrating. ARGH. 😡
@@JeremySheppard actually changed my account info last night after watching this video of yours... just in case they try anything sketch with my credit card or bank... hard to believe it's come to this, and so quickly.
@@JeremySheppard so just got a notice today that they refunded the buyer... said they sent the mic back to us (but there's no delivery confirmation or signature)... suffice to say I'm pissed and closed our shop, what a disgrace... not sure what else to do but join you in making a video rant here! I changed my account settings in our shop to a dead CC so hopefully they can't even get that money they're trying to extract. aaaiighhhhhh 😡
I agree that it seems that 'Reverb' has built it's reputation, and business savvy, on the focus of the BUYER Customers, while it seems that others tend to favor or lean toward the SELLER... I can't say that I blame 'Reverb', as buying customers will probably stay with them knowing that they have maybe more protection for their purchases. These are not NEW products, not covered by a manufacturer's warranty, and not from Amazon or Walmart's 'send it back anytime in any condition' scenarios...but just coming directly from other personal owners... Many of us will admit that owners tend to only speak 'good' of their products, and tend to underestimate any 'negative' that the rest of us would really want to know, ahead of time. 'Reverb' is then acting as the 'interim' to provide that protection for the end purchase, and keep those customers coming back... almost like the parent who walks into the room where two children are fighting: they don't really know 'who' started the fight, but whatever decision they make, it will look like they are 'picking sides' for the 'favorite' child... oh well. I tend to like the way 'Reverb' is protecting the buyer. I'll admit that sellers have a lot to 'live up to', but it might also be that they get more bang for their buck since Reverb is attracting many buyers to their products, where it might be much harder, otherwise. It works both ways. I agree, too, though, that as Judge Judy would say, 'buyer beware', and 'used cars don't come with a warranty'... but we are making purchases almost sight unseen, at least physically, and if you make part of your description INCLUSIVE of anything the customer is 'now' saying is a defect, then, well, Reverb should stand up for the seller, especially once the buyer has had the product delivered to them for several days to 'inspect' it. That 'timeframe' should also be part of Reverb 'buyer protection', of sorts, putting some onus on the buyer, as well.
I didn’t get screwed on a sale I made…. Listed a 339 sposted a bunch of pics & it sold in under 30 seconds I even messaged the buyer letting him know the info but he didn’t reply Turns out he wanted the refund because it was a satin one & my argument of: -I said ask questions before buying -I messaged them but no answer before shipping -they bought it immediately with out even looking or letting me edit it -pictures were clear as heck
I sold a bass on EBay guy played it gigged with it on camera!!! Then returned it . eBay sided with him . He took a picture with a speck of light reflecting and said that the bass was damaged. I of course received the bass back and it was in perfect shape. Sold it for $500 more anyway. But never again on EBay
I was actually going to list 3 guitars on Reverb this morning for the first time. When I got to the part of submitting my bank account and routing number, I stopped. They have full access to your account this way. No.
Pretty easy to add a 2nd checking account just for eBay or reverb sales. just keep the account empty and they can't take anything out. That's what I do. I use that account for PayPal as well. As soon as you get the money move it to your main account. They can't touch your other accounts. I haven't had to fall back on that bit of insurance but it gives me peace of mind.
Since covid it is very difficult for independent sellers. Reverb allows retail sellers ... and those that have close their retail shops who are doing business with Reverb at discount price. It is fee, fee, fee and tax and shipping for independents sellers which makes it impossible for independent sellers to compete. I too left Reverb.
How does it make sense that they get to keep the guitar and the money? I don't understand. I live in Chicago and I can tell you that it is not just buyers. Reverb has become a massive corporation, the people that work their do not have control over policy anymore.
I sold a strat neck that was in excellent condition on reverb. The guy wanted a refund the next day after it was delivered. He found a small dent and said it wasnt as described. It is a used neck.. I havent sold anything on reverb since. I was so bummed out because it was a really nice neck and i thought he would enjoy it.
Recently started selling on reverb. Had one transaction that involved 2 really bad reverb reps and I have decided I’m no longer using reverb to sell gear.
I too quit reverb after not paying for the shipping protection , ups lost my guitar and reverb torchered me after I sent another guitar to the customer . Reverb offered 100 dollars in reverb bucks . I lost my mind with them and quit as a preferred seller with over 100 sales in a year .
I still wear a Hilo Hattie's aloha shirt that I bought in Hilo 30 years ago, and still get compliments on it (in Alaska, Montana, Idaho and Washington). We're not old, we're comfortable.
I understand your an honest guy trying to sell an honest guitar as it is. A 40 year old guitar that has lived can have some issues, it can have a scratch here and there, or a crack or something that you would point out. You would not sell a guitar that cannot be playd on, simple as that. To buy or sell, do buisness comes with trust, in buying and selling guitars comes love for music and for guitars specially. Just the other day I went out with a friend of mine to a local music shop...just to find a guitar that would suit him. The seller spent more than an hour with us, talking and tryin out different guitars. He was the man that does the set-up for all the guitars. He was honest, calm and he knew what he was talking about. We went out there without buying it straight away as we had found one that suited him best. He got back yesterday and bought it. The owner was sure happy to see him back, and he now got the guitar that I helped him with , making a good well thought out decision. Keep your head up, don't let those people get to you. Greetings from the Netherlands..
I can’t afford to buy from Reverb because the shipping is crazily expensive. I’m in Australia and the shipping on a $200 pedal is often more than the pedal. Guitars and amps are even worse. The shipping prices are often 3 times as much as USPS.
They tried to rip me off I sold a pedal. And buyer was slow picking up from post office but he picked it up then they said no proof he did. I talked to him he said he got it was happy , still theydidn’t want to pay me. It was a big hassle. For a 3 month s I went too every single reverb video. And complained everywhere I could. I think they got sick of it finally they paid me but it took 3 months
"Safe Shipping" that is mandatory over $1500 has nothing to do with unscrupulous buyers and sellers. It's private insurance if it gets damaged in shipment.
I think anybody who has watched enough of this channel would buy a guitar from you in full confidence. I sure would. Also, the absolute nightmares you have faced! This is why I fail to do much of anything in life. Your perseverance is amazing. After my heart fell out of my stomach enough times, I would have given up! But maybe "giving up" on Reverb saved it for you anyway. Reverb is gross. They behave like total jerks and criminals as far as I'm concerned.
never buy a 12 string acoustic without testing it for lifting bulges and action. I can understand the guy returning it. Most used 12 strings are unplayable. Ive never met a used 12 string that wasnt screwed up in some way with bridge lifting. Never buy a 12 string without a trussrod. Just milimeters of lift and it ruins the whole action past the 7th fret. I settled on $600 plastic MartinX 12strings, but even they still lift after 5 years and I always max out my truss rod. But they sound as good as any $5000 12 string
I'm going to guess Reverb has decided on a 'buyer always gets money back' policy. If you think that for every seller's guitar there are hundreds of views (buyers) and that all the actual money comes from buyers then it's understandable. Also the issues around second hand guitars are too complex for Reverb to get into. It's frustrating for the seller, but I doubt Reverb could do it differently.
Most (if not all) platforms do this. The intention is that they don't want to do anything that'll introduce hesitation in buyers since that costs everyone money in lost potential sales. I think better protections should be put in place for sellers because its gotten far too easy for buyers to abuse their systems, but I don't see any incentive for marketplaces to actually do this. After all, most sellers don't have large social media followings, so it's not like they have a lot of other options.
I've heard nothing but bad things about reverb from sellers that are local to me who I like a lot. Given the choice I'll always buy local, even if I have to drive three hours or more to pick it up.
I think people have seen 100 point guitars in Guitar Connisseur that have undergone luthier restoration and think that every $2000 guitar from the 60s is going to look like that and they are supposed to play like a new PRS
I know you're not fishing for it, but Reverb are idiots if they don't use this post as an opportunity to reach out and offer you concierge service to get active again. Not special pricing or discounts, just some love and coaxing. Reverb, are you listening?!
@@rorystorm4284 This. They work off volume. Compared to their total revenue, any individual seller--even one with significant reach on social media--is simply too small to worry about.
Mass market selling is a corporate thing. Guitars are a craft/artisan thing. Corporations and art don't mix as is consistently demonstrated at every attempt.
I don’t mind selling and buying pedals / accessories. Guitars are just so loaded with possible issues between the buyer and seller, it’s just not worth it in most cases.
The biggest thing you said was the fact that you had 100% positive feedback. It doesn't matter to any selling platform, eBay and Mercari too. You can do everything in your power to be the best seller possible and buyers can still do whatever they want. They think the buyers need to be kept happy first and foremost but without quality sellers, their platform will die.
And what is worse is somehow Chinese sellers Mainly E--bay can get away with delaying an item and sending a small piece of Junk to fill the void of not having the item sent in time whereas a normal seller in USA this would not be allowed to happen. Sad part is I ordered from a person who is in the USA buying the items from China and sending them to me, the guy got a spare in the meantime junk item that he did not want and sent it to me. I ordered aluminum arrows $30 for 6 made from a specific brand in China and while waiting got a monocular worth $5 and they said it would be a $10 minimum value spotting scope. Then when I did get my arrows late by 4 months from when I should have got them the first time, they sent very similar arrows from a different brand aluminum of course, just lots of the parts are identical like the nocks or the grade of aluminum used but the fact this arrow had no markings and thinner foam rubber fletching/similar to feathers was a true indication the Chinese seller changed companies that made the arrows to sellers. This came out fine since both arrows are so similar with other then the one set having the writing the main difference was the arrows foam rubber fletching/similar to feathers, but it could have been worse in that I could have got arrows that are heavier or different amount of spine flex= how much an arrow flexes.
Yes, otherwise it will be mostly people selling cheap knockoffs that nobody buys after a bit or buy them knowing what they are to save money and quality will vary from the Chinese seller's people are buying from as some do not do quality control on the items they sell.
it is such exhaustive dance these platforms have to engage in. I guess they don't feel they can just put a an exhaustive list of rules for returns and disagreements and then abide by that set of rules, and lock everybody's money in escrow until whatever the waiting period is that the seller has established. Don't take any sides, and review the actual facts of the disagreement.
I would not buy or sell a guitar on reverb. But I would definitely do business with you no doubt in my mind your a honorable man
Why? I bought a new guitar from Reverb. Paid standard shipping fee
Local sale, cash and carry. It’s the best way with vintage stuff.
Should I find myself in the market to sell a guitar or acquire another, you will be the only person I talk to, thank you Jeremy for what you bring to the market!
Jeremy, my friend. You have just perfectly stated the importance of authenticity from both sides of the musical instrument buying and selling experience. Thank you, brother. You are a gentleman and a scholar. 🙏🏼💙💯
I remember that vid. Hard to believe it’s been 3 years already.
I listed some of my gear on Reverb and was surprised by the fees. Wow! I've moved my more expensive gear to local channels like Craig's List and consigned at my local music shop. It's worked out much better. My local music shop gets a sizeable chunk but at least it's going to a Mom-and-Pop store and not to Etsy.
Did you think Reverb was going to offer the website service for free? Ebay's/Amazons fees are worse.
@@carvinblack Reverb has the right to charge whatever they feel they can get away with but the increase in fees after the Etsy purchase has made them less affordable for most of my gear, especially, the more expensive gear. That's the advice to sellers; if you need the world-wide market place then Reverb has value but if you can sell locally then you can do better.
If I had a Ma/Pa store that would sell my stuff on consignment, I'd be so happy! I agree with you in going that route and supporting your local place (if you can). Makes for a fun guitar shop for everyone too!
@@schreds8882 Reverb exists only for profit anyway. Local business has come local ties. Reverb and whatever ever giant corp will do whatever it takes, including bullying people. It's a shame.
I will NEVER use Reverb again. I should have read the reviews about Reverb prior. My bad. Sold a beautiful Gibson 339 for approximately $2300. By the time Reverb got their fees, I ended up with $1940. $360 to facilitate the transaction, pay their mandatory insurance, bump fees (whatever they are) and blah, blah. Never again.
Using CL or Marketplace and I've become very versed of how the thieves, scammers and tire kickers work.
I am with you brother !
I know I’m late on this…but good video. I do remember your older video. I completely agree. It’s really the lack of informed buyers and those with buyers remorse. And every time (with most platforms) they side with the buyer. Reverb is still great. I refused to sell on Craigslist after a year ago. Its really a bummer (meaning the people) but you have to keep adapting. Good honest information from your video. Thanks for the content.
I hate that you had this experience, and understand you don't want such negativity to be your biggest drawing video...but it is how I (and many, many people) found you - celebrate all victories!
My problem reverb is it’s so damn hard to find individual used guitars. It’s flooded with new in box stuff from major retailers selling for more than msrp.
It’s also pretty cool that I’ve watched several hours of your content and have never heard you shill your own personal sales platform.
You’re so right man. It’s can be difficult to find actual used stuff on Reverb.
kudos for doing the right thing all the way through and standing your ground. damn the man!
I had some similar experiences on eBay with vintage amps about ten years ago and stopped selling. What a shame because I really enjoyed buying, bringing the amps back into working order (I had a tech do the work) and selling at a small profit after enjoying the amps. Those were the days....
First! Nice video!
I want to quit too but... that's the only place that my stuff sells.
The customer is NOT always right!
. . . One of - no , THE biggest lie ever stated ... ' The customer is always right '.
They are on occasions incorrect ,
uninformed , and unaware and not-at-all
worth ' k n o w i n g '. I am being polite .
In all of the situations you describe (except the 12 string), Reverb has been the problem. If they look at a listing and the guitar was accurately described then they are just creating and cultivating an environment where sellers get screwed. Dispute resolution should be fair, and clearly they've take a different approach. I'm not sure what they hope to gain, but 4 of those 5 sellers now feel that they can return anything for any reason. It's not supposed to work that way. If you don't demand honesty and accountability from buyers and sellers then it degrades the whole business.
Thank you for the update. You state things very well. I have used reverb for the past 5 years. I buy to try something out. I may keep a while, then sell and try something else, or keep it in my collection, not to flip it. I too have had a couple of incidents on reverb, with no recourse for me. Keep up the good work and thank you!
Glad to see that there are still some people who have ethics and morals. The music industry has notoriously attracted vultures who will prey upon any and all who get close. You are a breath of fresh air and I would definitely buy from you. 👍👍🤘🤘
I 100% agree with you with regard to vintage equipment. My thing is vintage amps and when I acquire one, I expect it to not work. These things come with so many issues that I'd never ever consider selling one online. Those old amps are stuffed full of parts that wear out. Tubes wear out, speaker paper wears out, voice coils can wear out, the capacitors wear out and the heating of the resistors wildly changes their value over time. The pots go scratchy too - almost forgot about that.
You are my kind of guitar guy. I love old guitars that have been there and done that. My newest instrument is 40 years old, my oldest 84. I've bought new guitars and sold them within a few years.
I will be in the market for another guitar within the next year and will be looking at what you have to offer!
Reverb is great for selling used guitar pedals and things in that smaller size and price range that you just want to get rid off... but Reverb is terrible for the big ticket items like vintage guitars they will severely rip you off 😩
Within the last year the fees have gotten so bad that Ebay's market for that sort of thing has become much more active.
I sold one guitar (a 22' Les Paul Modern ) on Reverb a few months ago and I took a big hit with all the fees. Just given the fees, I don't see how anyone could make a worthwhile profit selling guitars on reverb these days. That said, echoing what you said in the original vid on this subject, it is a great resource for finding that special guitar you're looking for. I can spend hours looking. I also like to use it to get a sense of how much a guitar sells for in the used market.
Thank you for your honesty and clarity. I knew reverb got percentage but not close to ten percent. It’s not worth the aggravation and anxiety that ensues.
That’s a good point that if your selling and buying a handful of guitars a year then Reverb is fine. I appreciate that critical analysis.
I sold a Marshall Origin 20 amp head to a terrible buyer in Florida. It was basically a brand new amp because I plugged it in, played it and didn't like it. I packaged the amplifier as if it was going overseas. Even bought extra cushioning material to ensure the travel was going to be safe. He receive it and damaged the amp purposely (because he didn't like the amp). He used a flathead screw driver to pop a little piece of the piping off. His excuses was that, "I only like pristine conditioned items in my collection". Luckily the person from Reverb who helped me with the claim knew what he did because he also scratched the face plate while messing with the piping. They paid for the shipping back to me. I glued the piping down with super glue (which the buyer didn't want to do himself) and sold the amp for more locally.
Even though they helped me that one time, Reverb is just another large piece of corporate crap at this point.
Interesting. I had NO problems buying from you. Great guitar. I play & sing with it every day.
I happened across an SG with a crazy thin neck back around '90.It was so narrow that it made it tough for me to chord, but it was great for small hands.Every other good quality ever attributed to SG's, - sustain, clarity, beautifully worn cherry ,- never seen another like it.
Hooked up the seller with a young woman starting a Alt band; she has since changed career paths, but says she will give it to her daughter, and would never sell it.
Right instrument for the right person; I've a purple, maple FB Strat that is like that, that: just does my " thing".
Done a lot of used pedals buys through Reverb; never had any problems, - knock on wood.I don't think they allow for the kind of wriggle room you'd need to mutually profit, especially with all the OCD cases and two bit hustlers & grifters in the game.Many of the shop owners I know give on line sales a low priority because of it.
Interesting video. I have had very good luck with the two guitars I purchased on Reverb (1969 Martin D12-20 and 2018 Martin Model America 1). I haven't sold anything (yet), but you've brought up some really good information - thanks!
Not just reverb - have come across several sites that start out with low fees, good conditions etc but after 5-10 years are now high fees, no responsibility, cash cows for second owners. Everything changes given time so the answer is to use them while still good but be prepared to ditch when fees start going up etc.
I have been trying to find somebody to start a platform with me to try to sink reverb that website has got so ridiculous on their advertisement when you go to sell a guitar now there can't be nothing in the background showing another piece of musical gear or it will automatically halt the process I have over 50 personal guitars that I've been trying to sell everything from Gibson SGS to switch vibracells I actually have the last SG that Tom Murphy put his hands on before leaving Gibson to open up the Gibson custom shop and you definitely sir is somebody that I would do business with or consider going in business with I've been with you since you've had 3,000 subscribers but under my wife's account LOL hang in there we will get there
Wow. Very helpful. Thank you!
Yep. That's the reverb we all know and love.
I've had one issue selling a guitar on Reverb, it was obviously heavily damaged in transit. reverb was great and worked out the entire problem with the buyer even though I was prepared to have to take it back and deal with the repair.
The problem is their fees keep going up and up, they make money on sales tax, insurance (which they require for sales over $1500) and bumps are a complete waste of money. And the net effect is that it is driving the market prices of guitars higher. Now everyone local wants to price based on inflated Reverb pricing.
I will say that I have had Reverb back me as a seller in certain situations. One was when I had a seller cuss me out and threaten me for shipping a pedal with Reverb protection because he wasn’t home when the post came. The buyer then tried to return it before he even received it after he got in trouble with Reverb. I’ve also had them back me when someone wanted to return a delay because it “wasn’t for them.” I think if you making sure your listing has the “as described” box checked you are more protected as a seller. Totally agree that the fees have gotten crazy and that the quality of buyers have gone down since fee increase. I am curious what other folks are doing to sell their gear.
I hate all that happened to you but many of the issues you mentioned have also happens to me. I was an early adopter and huge fan and moved away from eBay. I made nice money in my flips versus selling to dealers but things changed. Selling guitars there is like Craigslist. The buyers changed and the knowledge base went bad and fast. The fees also are crazy high. I buy in there but not selling anymore. Too much stress and hassle. Nice video.
If that had happened to me I’d’ve quit too. I quit eBay over a $4 sale last month. 🤪
eBay just as bad as Reverb for sure for a seller.
I have been flipping guitars for over just over 2 years now. Well over 700 at this point. Mostly ones under $500 but some for much more. It's great because I get to play lots of guitars that I wouldn't get to otherwise and because I make a profit on 98-99% of them, my wife doesn't give me a hard time about what I spend on guitars. I have sold most locally on FB and CL but 60-70 on Reverb. I have had a few issues where I gave a partial refund or took a couple back because of something I didn't catch. I have made enough from this that when it does happen, I kinda view it as play or Monopoly money and that I'll make it back up eventually. I can see how you might stress out over the high end stuff though. When I first started, I found a 1964 Guild archtop for $200. It was left-handed and I wasn't sure that it would sell very easily. I posted it on Reverb for $895 and then posted it on CL. In the time it took me to do that, about 3 minutes, it had sold on Reverb. That got me hooked. Have had a few other ones like that but mostly I make $40-$100. Selling is fun, but the thrill of the hunt is the best part.
I posted a guitar recently and from the second I hit enter, got in my truck and drove up my driveway, it sold.
@@TheGuitarsquatch That must have been one sweet guitar!
Great tips! I've always had good luck in LA with craigslist since there's so many musicians here. But I have several vintage guitars, amps, and keyboards that I am going to put on the market soon. I think I'll avoid Reverb. But sounds like buying on Reverb is a good thing - just much of the vintage gear is way overpriced.
I have never shopped or sold on Reverb. Didn't really trust it when it launched, but I really didn't have too much to off-load anyway. I have sold a few things on ebay in the past but it has been 3 years since doing any of that. At this stage, if I have something to sell, it will be local...like Brad said below
The best way to use Reverb is to look at the listings.....then call the guitar shops directly and deal with them off Reverb
You would certainly save the guitar shop some money in listing fees :). Do you negotiate a lower price knowing this?
@@rosewoodsteel6656 of course….The shops themselves will often offer up a lower price as soon as you speak to them. You don’t have the Reverb protection so you have to make sure you are dealing with reputable shops
This!
Then as a buyer you have absolutely no protection at all
I can only speak to my experience. I’ve sold about 40-50 items on reverb consisting mostly of electric guitars and pedals. I’ve never had an issue with a buyer. I would guess that it’s easier to safely sell electric guitars vs acoustic guitars though. On the flip side, I’ve purchased plenty of gear on Reverb as well. I’ve had one situation where an item was not aa described and Reverb refunded me which was obviously from my perspective the right thing to do. It was a midi controller and it showed up with a hairy piece of chewing gum stuck to the bottom of it (not disclosed or photoed).
Reverb has been a fantastic tool for me as a seller and I continue to use them to this day. That said, I agree it’s expensive and if I had a better way to sell gear at good prices with less fees, I’d do it. But Reverb is still the best way for me to connect with real buyers so I continue to use them. Reverb does deliver value for a seller and that value can’t be free. They put themselves in the middle of these transactions and add legitimacy for buyers so it’s only fair they charge for that value. The bottom line for me is that I trust Reverb way more than I trust eBay so pick your poison. The fees are tough to swallow but if we could sell gear at good prices in a reasonable timeline without Reverb we would but we can’t so we don’t. If you can find a way to build your own legitimacy and market online, all the power to you. You found a way to circumvent those fees. Most non-dealers don’t have the means to do that though.
Something similar happened to me and I don't use Reverb anymore either. I sold a 40 y.o. Rick 330-12 for $1700 with the case. The buyer tried to get me to take $400 off but before I got to the email he told Reverb it wasn't in the condition it was advertised. Anyway, he shipped it back to me at Reverb's expense and Reverb told me I had 2 weeks to pay them back. After numerous emails back and forth proving the guitar was properly photographed and described they still sided with the buyer. So I cancelled the CC I had in with Reverb. The locked my account for about 6 months and now I see it is mysteriously open. I am not a thief yet the will not answer me so I can return their money less shipping on this horrific transaction.
I really liked Reverb when I first found it a number of years ago but it has gotten problematic the past couple of years. The fees keep going up and up as well. I haven’t sold anything on there in a few years and I’ve only bought a few things like tuners, bridges, pedals etc.
Buyers' remorse is real. Buyers hope beyond the facts. I get it.
I still buy and sell the odd pedal on reverb. I generally list everything for top dollar on reverb than make sure I have a gumtree and marketplace ads to allow lower cost options to be discussed. Reverb has its place but it’s pretty much eBay like at this point.
I had a similar experience selling a guitar on reverb that ended up in me telling them to delete my account (I had sold quite a bit on there as well). It was another one of those instances where they, of course, sided with the buyer. Long story, but it was my word against his, so naturally, I had to give the money back. I now only sell through fb marketplace. I don't regret leaving at all.
I’ve sold a lot on reverb and bought a number things. It’s not a music store. Pictures and descriptions should be like you’re selling to a neighbor or friend be honest 100% more pictures and you think you need, do a demo video and answer every question. The item should sell itself. So sorry you had a rough time, Especially when it comes from more than one item, no one deserves that. Sometimes bad things happen to good people.
I had similar with eBay. Sold a messner pedal, buyer said it was damaged and had a weird noise. I always test stuff and film it before I ship and it was fine. I paid for and arranged return. Thankfully when it came back it was fine, I suspect the buyer had cheap power supply. I was happy to refund less the return postage. In spite of me having before and after video of the pedal working perfectly eBay said there was no way they could determine the condition of the item pre sale. So I had to suck it up, it was only £5 but that wasn't the point. The reality is both eBay and Reverb have far more buyers than sellers so they will always look after that end of the market. In addition they can bully the seller and hold them to ransom IE "we will delete your account if you don't do what we say". Unfortunately it is a trend we are seeing with big tech generally. Many are operating like autocratic firms of gangsters, shaking down their community members, the comparisons, when you look at it are pretty stark.
I have a signature KISS guitar I was going to sell on reverb but I’m spooked now. I’ll try local ads. Plus it’s a used guitar I’ve paid taxes why should I pay taxes again?
Also I read they take 5% plus processing fees but the processing fee amt isn’t listed. Plus taxes and adding reverb’s protection and finally plus shipping. How do sellers make a profit after all that?
Forge ahead my Friend ... Screw them . You will be fine . You don't need them !
I had a similar experience with a sale but a vastly different outcome from Jeremy. Sold a 2013 D-28 Authentic 1941 on Reverb; buyer gets it and found an extremely small surface scratch on the back - I mean you couldnt see it unless the light hit just right. Immediately the buyer comes at me saying he is going to sue if I didnt give him his money back and being really belligerent. I refunded the buyer and he sent me the guitar back. A couple of weeks later I got a credit back to my account for the full amount that I refunded the seller. Worked out extremely well for me but I have to imagine that had to of been an oversight.
Once ESTY came into the picture it was downhill quick
Exactly this
What's Esty?
@@locky828 Grated Lemon
@@locky828 He meant Etsy, its a craft purchasing website who bought reverb.
@@NoahRichardHarris Ahh, thank you Noah! I've sadly never heard of it so I'll be checking that out
I’ve bought and sold many items on Reverb. I’ve had to resolve a couple things with a buyer before and a couple times with a seller. Never had to have Reverb step in to intervene. I’ve found it easier to sell on Reverb than locally just due to # of people potentially interested. Allows me to buy new gear I’d like and I typically position myself to make a profit.
Yep, and if you start another account but use your original email they will let you. So weird. I work with some food delivery apps, and they operate in a similar way to selling apps. And there you have it, most of our lives are run on apps. Discusting😢. I wish i had not been one of the millions asking for star trek tech in the 70s...
i dont sell whole guitars, just parts - i make sales on ebay constantly, but for the 8 months that i had a reverb account, i did not sell one single item.. it didnt help that reverb would de-list my items for not selling... smh
They didn’t delist for not selling, all items are set to either renew automatically or manually.
@@gothampops do you work there?
@@theanarcho-luthierist2882 No, shops on Reverb and most other marketplaces.
How can I see what all guitars you have for sale?
My website. Jeremytheguitarhunter.com/shop
I'm in the middle of EXACTLY THIS with them on an $1800 vintage mic where the buyer clearly did not read my accurate description. It's infuriating. A month on from the refund request - that I am refusing - and I'm sitting waiting for a response from "support" for 7 days. SEVEN DAYS with no communication after laying out all of the facts. I'm over it. Really sad and frustrating. ARGH. 😡
I also have 100% positive feedback over years selling on there. Just really a bummer. Oh well.
Man. I am so sorry. Infuriating. Reverb is a very different company now, and I don't think for the better.
@@JeremySheppard so true
@@JeremySheppard actually changed my account info last night after watching this video of yours... just in case they try anything sketch with my credit card or bank... hard to believe it's come to this, and so quickly.
@@JeremySheppard so just got a notice today that they refunded the buyer... said they sent the mic back to us (but there's no delivery confirmation or signature)... suffice to say I'm pissed and closed our shop, what a disgrace... not sure what else to do but join you in making a video rant here! I changed my account settings in our shop to a dead CC so hopefully they can't even get that money they're trying to extract. aaaiighhhhhh 😡
I agree that it seems that 'Reverb' has built it's reputation, and business savvy, on the focus of the BUYER Customers, while it seems that others tend to favor or lean toward the SELLER... I can't say that I blame 'Reverb', as buying customers will probably stay with them knowing that they have maybe more protection for their purchases. These are not NEW products, not covered by a manufacturer's warranty, and not from Amazon or Walmart's 'send it back anytime in any condition' scenarios...but just coming directly from other personal owners... Many of us will admit that owners tend to only speak 'good' of their products, and tend to underestimate any 'negative' that the rest of us would really want to know, ahead of time. 'Reverb' is then acting as the 'interim' to provide that protection for the end purchase, and keep those customers coming back... almost like the parent who walks into the room where two children are fighting: they don't really know 'who' started the fight, but whatever decision they make, it will look like they are 'picking sides' for the 'favorite' child... oh well.
I tend to like the way 'Reverb' is protecting the buyer. I'll admit that sellers have a lot to 'live up to', but it might also be that they get more bang for their buck since Reverb is attracting many buyers to their products, where it might be much harder, otherwise. It works both ways.
I agree, too, though, that as Judge Judy would say, 'buyer beware', and 'used cars don't come with a warranty'... but we are making purchases almost sight unseen, at least physically, and if you make part of your description INCLUSIVE of anything the customer is 'now' saying is a defect, then, well, Reverb should stand up for the seller, especially once the buyer has had the product delivered to them for several days to 'inspect' it. That 'timeframe' should also be part of Reverb 'buyer protection', of sorts, putting some onus on the buyer, as well.
I didn’t get screwed on a sale I made…. Listed a 339 sposted a bunch of pics & it sold in under 30 seconds
I even messaged the buyer letting him know the info but he didn’t reply
Turns out he wanted the refund because it was a satin one & my argument of:
-I said ask questions before buying
-I messaged them but no answer before shipping
-they bought it immediately with out even looking or letting me edit it
-pictures were clear as heck
How much should you sell it for?
@@jdl2180 1400
I sold a bass on EBay guy played it gigged with it on camera!!! Then returned it . eBay sided with him . He took a picture with a speck of light reflecting and said that the bass was damaged. I of course received the bass back and it was in perfect shape. Sold it for $500 more anyway. But never again on EBay
Are you still selling on GBase? Would you still recommend it for a seller that does not have a website or youtube channel?
No, no, and no. Sadly. It's okay for selling some stuff but you have to have the whole infrastructure of a business.
I was actually going to list 3 guitars on Reverb this morning for the first time. When I got to the part of submitting my bank account and routing number, I stopped. They have full access to your account this way. No.
Pretty easy to add a 2nd checking account just for eBay or reverb sales. just keep the account empty and they can't take anything out. That's what I do. I use that account for PayPal as well. As soon as you get the money move it to your main account. They can't touch your other accounts. I haven't had to fall back on that bit of insurance but it gives me peace of mind.
Does Reverb add sales tax to the purchase price total along with shipping and handling?
Yes
Since covid it is very difficult for independent sellers. Reverb allows retail sellers ... and those that have close their retail shops who are doing business with Reverb at discount price. It is fee, fee, fee and tax and shipping for independents sellers which makes it impossible for independent sellers to compete. I too left Reverb.
question: Jeremy, do you think Reverb went south after Etsy bought them up?
I don't have very much experience with them since they've been owned by Etsy. I think they lost their soul a few years before that.
How does it make sense that they get to keep the guitar and the money? I don't understand. I live in Chicago and I can tell you that it is not just buyers. Reverb has become a massive corporation, the people that work their do not have control over policy anymore.
I sold a strat neck that was in excellent condition on reverb.
The guy wanted a refund the next day after it was delivered.
He found a small dent and said it wasnt as described.
It is a used neck..
I havent sold anything on reverb since.
I was so bummed out because it was a really nice neck and i thought he would enjoy it.
So if I have 2 old mint Fender Deluxe amps with pedigrees Reverb should not even be an option? Thanks for this and Cheers!
What's your thoughts on Sweetwater?
DOES ANYONE KNOW THE NAME IF THAT SONG HE PLAYS AT 2:50 ?
It's called, "auld lang syne" usually played around new years eve.
Any good Facebook groups you recommend checking out?
Recently started selling on reverb. Had one transaction that involved 2 really bad reverb reps and I have decided I’m no longer using reverb to sell gear.
I too quit reverb after not paying for the shipping protection , ups lost my guitar and reverb torchered me after I sent another guitar to the customer . Reverb offered 100 dollars in reverb bucks . I lost my mind with them and quit as a preferred seller with over 100 sales in a year .
Jeremy, it's a three year old shirt?
Hell, that's still new. I'm still wearing shirts from 10 years ago.
I still wear a Hilo Hattie's aloha shirt that I bought in Hilo 30 years ago, and still get compliments on it (in Alaska, Montana, Idaho and Washington). We're not old, we're comfortable.
@@charlesbranch4120:
Right on, dude.
(Broke is also a factor)
I'm careful and fully document everything on that platform. If I get the wrong vibe from a buyer or seller I don't sell or buy.
I understand your an honest guy trying to sell an honest guitar as it is. A 40 year old guitar that has lived can have some issues, it can have a scratch here and there, or a crack or something that you would point out. You would not sell a guitar that cannot be playd on, simple as that. To buy or sell, do buisness comes with trust, in buying and selling guitars comes love for music and for guitars specially. Just the other day I went out with a friend of mine to a local music shop...just to find a guitar that would suit him. The seller spent more than an hour with us, talking and tryin out different guitars. He was the man that does the set-up for all the guitars. He was honest, calm and he knew what he was talking about. We went out there without buying it straight away as we had found one that suited him best. He got back yesterday and bought it. The owner was sure happy to see him back, and he now got the guitar that I helped him with , making a good well thought out decision. Keep your head up, don't let those people get to you. Greetings from the Netherlands..
That's the video I found you on...
I can’t afford to buy from Reverb because the shipping is crazily expensive. I’m in Australia and the shipping on a $200 pedal is often more than the pedal. Guitars and amps are even worse. The shipping prices are often 3 times as much as USPS.
Reverb is really good only to research instrument prices. I've never bought anything from them, fortunately.
Reverb is still cheaper than local consignment and it reaches a much larger audience. How much did you charge to consign guitars in your store?
Cool shirt.
What camera are you using on this video?
Canon 6D Mark II and a 35mm f/1.4L
@@JeremySheppard It looks good.
They tried to rip me off I sold a pedal. And buyer was slow picking up from post office but he picked it up then they said no proof he did. I talked to him he said he got it was happy , still theydidn’t want to pay me. It was a big hassle. For a 3 month s I went too every single reverb video. And complained everywhere I could. I think they got sick of it finally they paid me but it took 3 months
I know what you mean first guitar I sold on reverb was a return issue
I also quit Reverb over a year ago. 👍
How did they get away with keeping your guitar and the money?
I had the original $2100 or so. They never got it back, I told them to take the guitar.
"Safe Shipping" that is mandatory over $1500 has nothing to do with unscrupulous buyers and sellers. It's private insurance if it gets damaged in shipment.
I think anybody who has watched enough of this channel would buy a guitar from you in full confidence. I sure would. Also, the absolute nightmares you have faced! This is why I fail to do much of anything in life. Your perseverance is amazing. After my heart fell out of my stomach enough times, I would have given up! But maybe "giving up" on Reverb saved it for you anyway. Reverb is gross. They behave like total jerks and criminals as far as I'm concerned.
never buy a 12 string acoustic without testing it for lifting bulges and action. I can understand the guy returning it. Most used 12 strings are unplayable. Ive never met a used 12 string that wasnt screwed up in some way with bridge lifting. Never buy a 12 string without a trussrod. Just milimeters of lift and it ruins the whole action past the 7th fret. I settled on $600 plastic MartinX 12strings, but even they still lift after 5 years and I always max out my truss rod. But they sound as good as any $5000 12 string
I'm going to guess Reverb has decided on a 'buyer always gets money back' policy. If you think that for every seller's guitar there are hundreds of views (buyers) and that all the actual money comes from buyers then it's understandable. Also the issues around second hand guitars are too complex for Reverb to get into. It's frustrating for the seller, but I doubt Reverb could do it differently.
Most (if not all) platforms do this. The intention is that they don't want to do anything that'll introduce hesitation in buyers since that costs everyone money in lost potential sales. I think better protections should be put in place for sellers because its gotten far too easy for buyers to abuse their systems, but I don't see any incentive for marketplaces to actually do this. After all, most sellers don't have large social media followings, so it's not like they have a lot of other options.
I've heard nothing but bad things about reverb from sellers that are local to me who I like a lot. Given the choice I'll always buy local, even if I have to drive three hours or more to pick it up.
I think people have seen 100 point guitars in Guitar Connisseur that have undergone luthier restoration and think that every $2000 guitar from the 60s is going to look like that and they are supposed to play like a new PRS
We know just because all songs can always use more cowbell doesn’t mean the same concerning reverb. Reverb is best used sparingly, to taste.
IF YOU LIST, SAGGING TOP, 1.55 NUT, THEN THE NUT SEZ IT WAS NOT AS DESCRIBED
HOW IN THE HECK CAN RETURD TELL YOU THEY SIDED WITH THE NUT?
I wouldnt sell vintage gear on Reverb. Seems like a bad idea.
I know you're not fishing for it, but Reverb are idiots if they don't use this post as an opportunity to reach out and offer you concierge service to get active again. Not special pricing or discounts, just some love and coaxing. Reverb, are you listening?!
Sorry, huge Corps don't work that way. They don't care. They don't care about your feelings. It's just one huge spreadsheet.
@@rorystorm4284 This. They work off volume. Compared to their total revenue, any individual seller--even one with significant reach on social media--is simply too small to worry about.
@@syntaxlost9239 Yes, like I said, they don't care about anyone's feelings. Just the bottom line.
How could Reverb demand both the guitar and the selling price? Doesn't make any sense.
Mass market selling is a corporate thing. Guitars are a craft/artisan thing. Corporations and art don't mix as is consistently demonstrated at every attempt.
I'm pretty much over using 3rd party.
I don’t mind selling and buying pedals / accessories. Guitars are just so loaded with possible issues between the buyer and seller, it’s just not worth it in most cases.