Saturday 23 July 2016

4 Ways Sears Is Getting Better For Sellers

Sears is getting better for sellers in many ways than one. This is perhaps the time in e commerce world where the latter should consider placing their best foot forward in Sears alongside their presence in top e commerce marketplaces like Amazon and eBay. Being voted as the top 10 most trustworthy marketplace this year and giving Amazon a touch competition as far as customer satisfaction is concerned, there is not much that will stop unique visitors to increase many times over in by the end of the season. Improvements and enhancement in different diverse product categories ranging from electronics to home and beauty, has also been welcomed by buyers.

Keeping noticeable improvements in mind, it is expected that by the arrival of the festive season 2016, sellers who sell on Sears will win the greater part of buyer’s trust and gain herculean profits in the process. This makes the following two months the best phase to establish presence in the platform. As far as establishing presence in Sears is concerned, things seem to have become even better than it has ever been. The benefits to experience are far too many topped by these integral aspects…


  • Better API integration – Sears has been working on its API integration and has actually done a commendable job towards this direction. Integrating with Sears API is now a literal cakewalk something like Shopify to Amazon connection carried out by promising e commerce support developers.
  • FBS – Fulfilled by Sears completes this platform from end to end. With this new order completion essential, sellers will no longer need to depend upon external order completion solutions like FBA etc.
  • Free advertisement – Unlike Amazon that has brought in urgent changes in their advertisement policies, merchants can advertise free on Sears. Costs will apply only when buyers click on the advert and visit merchant store.

Last but not the least, Sears has always been cost effective for sellers allowing the latter to make and maintain profits that lose it as operational costs. 

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