You know the drill. Photograph the comic. Try to read the issue number off a slightly blurry cover. Type out a title that's actually going to get found in search. Write a description. Set a price. Hit list. Then do it again, and again, for however many books you've got sat in the pile, tab open the whole time because if you look away something always seems to go wrong.
That's not listing comics, that's a part time job. I built a tool that does the reading, writing and listing for you, and the thing I actually want you to notice is how little of it needs your attention. Here's exactly how it works, start to finish.
See it in action
One honest note on the video: I'm constantly making tweaks and improvements to the tool, so it might look slightly different by the time you use it. The way it works, batch, walk away, review, list, stays the same.
How you get access
The tool lives in the members area of the site, so there's one small step before your first batch: sign up as a member. I approve new members personally, it keeps the tool in the hands of genuine comic sellers rather than bots, and the moment I approve you, your free trial starts automatically. No card, no separate activation, nothing else to press. You'll get an email confirming it's live, then you connect your eBay account and you're away.
How it works
You take your photos, batched by comic. The tool reads each one, works out what it is, writes a proper eBay title and description, and gets it ready as a draft. You check the drafts, not the process. Adjust anything you want, confirm the ones you're happy with, and they post to your own eBay account on their own. That's the whole shape of it. Here's each step properly.
Batch your pics
Photograph your comics in order, front and back (or however many shots you take per comic), and upload the lot together. Tell it how many photos belong to each comic and it sorts the rest out itself. No need to do this one comic at a time, batch as many as you've got.
Watch it upload, that's the only bit that needs your eyes
While the photos are uploading, keep an eye on it, that's genuinely the only part worth watching, just to make sure it's actually going up. The moment that finishes, your part is done. Everything after this happens on the server, not your phone.
Go make a cup of tea
Once the upload's finished, walk away. Screen off, browser closed, phone in your pocket, doesn't matter. The reading and drafting carries on regardless, because it's not running on your device any more. Come back in a few minutes and there'll be a set of drafts waiting for you to look at.
Review the drafts, amend if needed
Each draft shows you the title it's written and the price it's suggested. Have a quick look, change the price if you'd set it differently, tweak the title if you want to, or just leave it as is if it looks right. Nothing goes anywhere until you say so.
List to eBay, give it ten minutes
Confirm the ones you're happy with and that's it, they're queued to post. Check your phone again in about ten minutes and they should all be sitting live on your eBay account. No watching a progress bar, no keeping the tab open just in case.
Why it's built this way
Most listing tools make you sit there for the whole process, because the moment your screen goes off or you switch apps, whatever it was doing just stops. That's the bit I wanted gone. The only genuinely fragile step is getting your photos off your phone, so that's the only step your phone actually has to survive. Everything slow, the reading, the writing, the actual posting, happens somewhere your screen going dark can't touch it.
You still get the final say on every listing, title and price included, before anything goes live. It just doesn't need you standing over it to get there.
What it costs
Ten listings free, so you can try the whole thing properly before deciding it's worth anything. After that it's £10 a month for 100 listings, and you can cancel whenever you like, no notice period, no catch.
Try it on your next batch
Sign in, connect your eBay account, and batch your first set of comics. Ten listings free to see how it actually feels.
Start Listing