I’m confused about this second set of item details. It contains traits such as gender, item quantity, price, SKU, and UPC. The thing is, I already entered that information in the item detail boxes above. It is very redundant information and I’m curious why it’s even there.
[URL removed]
![]() |
twintail_mcgee Reputation: 10 See twintail_mcgee's booth |
The first set you encounter on the listing page, dictates what’s seen by buyers, as the item details; and is used by Google, if you’re paying at least 9% fees. You have variations in this part and that’s why you’re seeing the second part, where you set your selling price, SKU, UPC, etc, that applies to each variation of your products. Simply fill in the information, or omit it if not required.
If there’s only ‘one’ type of the product, then make sure to remove anything in the first section, that could trigger the second section being necessary.
![]() |
MagnoliaScreens Reputation: 1120 See MagnoliaScreens' booth |
It is because you have the Many Genders option in traits selected, this means that you can now enter each gender and any difference in sku, upc, or pricing can also be entered..
It would be better to just go back to the top and put in Boys and Girls instead of many genders..especially if it only means that the same item can be all, instead of having slightly different items for each gender
This will occur any time the Many is chosed in the item traits,,,ie many colors, many styles, many sizes, etc I gives the seller the option to enter different options.
![]() |
CindyBear Reputation: 3068 See CindyBear's booth |
My idea is one set of traits is for Bonanza search and the other is for Google search. Which is which I can’t say and I could be wrong
![]() |
Fathertime Reputation: 383 See Fathertime's booth |
Viewed: 1057 time
Asked: Translation missing: es.datetime.distance_in_words.over_x_years ago
Latest response: Translation missing: es.datetime.distance_in_words.over_x_years ago
Remember these tips:
- Use links to other sources to support your opinions
- Use examples where possible
- Put yourself in the inquirers shoes: what extra info would be helpful?
Should I post a comment or an answer?
You can only post one answer, so make it count. Maybe your reply is more fitting as a comment instead?
Post an answer for:
- Replies that directly and specifically answer the original question
Post a comment for:
- "Thanks," "Me too," "I agree," or "Works for me" types of replies
- When you would like the original poster to provide more details
- When you have more to add to someone else's question or answer
See also our Roundtable FAQ.
Formatting
Community help posts follow certain formatting guidelines, which may impact the look of your post. If you're interested in tweaking the format, instructions are available here.
1 Comment