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SnipeGoods.com Ebay Sniping program has been online since August 14th, 2008 and by many requests, we have brought back our yearly Special of a Lifetime SnipeGoods Access for just $ 24.95 until 2/28/2012 instead of our $ 5.95 monthly or $ 39.95 yearly access plans. Hurry, these won't last long !! And this also includes our 14 day 100% Money Back guarantee and all payments are processed via www.PayPal.com for your safety. No Paypal account is needed either!!
Or grab your lifetime unlimited Snipes now:
Simple to use - 3 easy
1) On Ebays site, simply obtain the item number of the item on the right hand side
2) Jot it down or copy it and then:
3) Simply login here on the left to enter the Secure SnipeGoods area and enter or Paste it and enter your Snipe!
As you may have noticed we are now combined and hosted with TISH LLC Internet services On a Dell Server with 4 Processors, 4 gig of ram and 2 Terrabytes of disk storage to make your Sniping experience the the best it can be and now operates out of one of the top Datacenters with the best multi-backbone connection to the internet
Auction Sniper Tip Sheet
Most anyone can buy on online-auctions, but only the more skillful do it well. Using SnipeGoods Sniper gives you a competitive-edge that will help you to become more successful with your online-auctions. We've compiled a few tips that we've garnered through years of online-auction experience.
Bid Your Maximum
eBay will accept just the next increment over the previous bidder's max. This is why it is safe for you to put in the absolute maximum you're willing to bid.
Remember that eBay doesn't show a bidder's max, just the next increment needed over the previous bidder. - Your snipe bid will jump to a seller's reserve. This would happen if you bid directly on eBay too.
We follow all eBay rules in bidding. - Don't rely on emails to tell you your bid is too low. A bidder may have a much higher max than what eBay shows in the auction. They only show the next increment above the previous bidder.
An auction might show a current bid of $23, when in fact the bidder's max is $100. So a snipe of $52 will look perfectly fine until it snipes and you lose to the max bidder at $53. Always put in your max. Much of the bidding happens in the last hour of the auction, where an email won't do you any good.