NaturalJWL
Hero Member
Good you saved it....But if anyone never makes a mistake....They are not trying hard enough....lol
I am having my first garage sale.
I have just been accumulating to many yard sale buys and my realtor is sponsoring a community garage sale. I do not live in her community so she offered a free spot on her lawn. Her daughter will get the driveway.
Need some tips on how to handle buyers. I know how I am when I buy, I am cheap, most sellers do not know how to handle me
Also, how much change (bills) should I bring?
I have mostly costume jewelry and vintage.
Do most buyers do it to resell or are people just looking for things that catch their eye?
Hello Dan,
When I do our home sales, I don't mark things in cents. If it's worth 50-cents, then most likely it's worth a dollar.
Putting jewelry in "Stapled shut" Zip loc baggies (not the thin unsealable sandwich baggies) helps control theft.
If it's a big sale, $100 in ones, $100 in fives, $200 in tens, and $100 in twenties. Small sales take a lot of small bills given back as change; and one large $50 or $100 dollar bill can wipe out early change. I keep my $10's & $20's in one pocket and my $1's and $5's bundle in the other to keep from revealing "large bundles" of cash as well as ease of making change.
With smalls, the more tables you have, the better... :>)
Bill
If someone tried to buy a $1 item with a $100 bill, I would decline and tell them to come back when they have appropriate change.
I had a small box of rings on the table, probably 200 - 300 rings. Some lady picked up one and I knew it shouldn't have been in there. I would have had to sell it to her for $1 but she tossed it back in the box. I quickly picked it up and put it in my pocket. Just looked it up. goes for around $35 on feeBay. I am going to have to look at that box again.
ANOTHER UPDATE ON THIS RING.
I put it on ebay for $75 and just got an offer for $50.00 sounds fine to me and the future buyer sent a note:
I am a former woman Marine and would love to have this ring. But I am 65 now and on a fixed income. I can come up with $50.00, but I don't know about the whole $75. Please consider my offer, and be kind, please.
I am real tempted to even offer her $45 because she is a fellow vet, probably viet nam also. But being the skeptic I am i looked her up on ebay. She has 1007 positive feedback points with 1346 transactions in the last 12 months. wow very active! Now I clicked over to see what she sold.
She sold one $2.75 charm bracelet in the last 12 months and that was more than 6 months ago.
So my question is should i sell this ring to someone on a fixed budget that has made more than 1300 purchases on ebay in the last year? ? ?
you will have to speak up real loud over the sad violin music playing in the back ground
P.S. I will accept her offer. A 50 is still a 50.
It's a habit from his old LEO days, checking background info., lol!Dan,
We can't be so judgmental about others. If she says she is a vet and that is enough to make you consider her offer, then simply accept it. Why take it to the next level and analyze her spending habits?
Dan,
We can't be so judgmental about others. If she says she is a vet and that is enough to make you consider her offer, then simply accept it. Why take it to the next level and analyze her spending habits? That is really none of anyone's business but her own and you will never fully understand her situation based on the limited information you obtained based solely on past buying habits.
My 2 cents.
IF she's a vet. You haven't been given a sob story about why someone wants your thing for free or a deep discount? You feel good about doing something nice, and then find out they've been doing that to everyone for years and definitely aren't as bad off as they said they were?
Diggum, yea, can't break that habit and google makes it so easy now.It's a habit from his old LEO days, checking background info., lol!