1. Cool shirt 2. Audiobooks are overlooked. There’s upside with those 3. I never run into the diversity of magazines you do. 4. Great fiction hauls with tons of profit potential!
Brian Lumley- Necroscope is an awesome series! It’s a vampire with a fantasy/sci-fi edge to it. I’m only missing 1-2 of the series. They’ll sell. Great finds 😃👍🏻
Heya. My man in the Browns room. Ahoy hailing from Mentor, Ohio. Was gonna comment on your manga bundle and buying #16. That one made way more sense to buy the last one for $5 to bump the lot to over ~$30+ more.
On pricing, when you say something sells for $20-$30 on ebay, that may be the case for many, but I always see a few low ball ones for $5-$10, like from those stores that sell millions of items with free shipping, or someone just looking to get rid of it. What is your pricing approach in that situation assuming all else is equal (condition, edition, etc.) - do you price at the average or at the low end? I feel like any buyer would go right the low end item. Thank you.
Whatever I say is the range I’m intending on pricing. Sometimes when there is a wide range I try to point that out and have to do more research ( like the Lantern City that ranged $10-70
I recently sold a bunch of DVD sets and between having to spend so much time looking at each DVD and describing their condition (which was very good, but there were some minor scratches so I watched a few minutes of each to make sure they played) and I had one buyer contact me for a refund and they sent pictures of a DVD that had been absolutely shattered, I decided it's not worth it and I will only sell sealed DVDs in the future. I feel like I can't promise a skip free DVD unless I watch the whole thing which I can't do, so I don't feel comfortable listing it. I also feel like by offering 100% satisfaction and returns, scammers will gravitate towards this kind of listing so they can get refunds after they watch it or they get to keep it because it's not worth me paying to have them ship it back.
Thanks, that's helpful. Is it only referred here in an ebay context? Is there a platform or software that consolidates both amazon and ebay sold comps into one? @@curatorofthelost
Always look forward to learning something.
1. Cool shirt
2. Audiobooks are overlooked. There’s upside with those
3. I never run into the diversity of magazines you do.
4. Great fiction hauls with tons of profit potential!
Brian Lumley- Necroscope is an awesome series! It’s a vampire with a fantasy/sci-fi edge to it. I’m only missing 1-2 of the series. They’ll sell. Great finds 😃👍🏻
You found some good stuff. Learning fiction is definitely worth it ⭐️
Thank you for another great video. Lots of good content.
Those Warhammer books were awesome. I haven't come across much, but what I did find were in French, and they sold as well. Great stuff, Shane!
Heya. My man in the Browns room. Ahoy hailing from Mentor, Ohio.
Was gonna comment on your manga bundle and buying #16. That one made way more sense to buy the last one for $5 to bump the lot to over ~$30+ more.
I still have some Warhammer. Have a copy of Abnett The Lost paperback. First few pages are torn. Should still get $90-100 for it.
The Lost is a great one. That will be a nice sale.
On pricing, when you say something sells for $20-$30 on ebay, that may be the case for many, but I always see a few low ball ones for $5-$10, like from those stores that sell millions of items with free shipping, or someone just looking to get rid of it. What is your pricing approach in that situation assuming all else is equal (condition, edition, etc.) - do you price at the average or at the low end? I feel like any buyer would go right the low end item. Thank you.
Whatever I say is the range I’m intending on pricing. Sometimes when there is a wide range I try to point that out and have to do more research ( like the Lantern City that ranged $10-70
I recently sold a bunch of DVD sets and between having to spend so much time looking at each DVD and describing their condition (which was very good, but there were some minor scratches so I watched a few minutes of each to make sure they played) and I had one buyer contact me for a refund and they sent pictures of a DVD that had been absolutely shattered, I decided it's not worth it and I will only sell sealed DVDs in the future. I feel like I can't promise a skip free DVD unless I watch the whole thing which I can't do, so I don't feel comfortable listing it. I also feel like by offering 100% satisfaction and returns, scammers will gravitate towards this kind of listing so they can get refunds after they watch it or they get to keep it because it's not worth me paying to have them ship it back.
Very true on used stuff. I do prefer the new wrapped media too!
What are “comps”?
Comps are price comparisons. Sold comps are prices from actual sold items on eBay. List comps are prices of listings only- no sold data.
Thanks, that's helpful. Is it only referred here in an ebay context? Is there a platform or software that consolidates both amazon and ebay sold comps into one? @@curatorofthelost
Do you make your living doing this?
Just a side gig hobby for me
Your bolo on cross stitch mags...$5 each? That's a bolo???? I can sell craft mags for that easily..knit crochet quilt cross stitch!!!