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Thing is, a lot of these eBay success stories don't seem to be able to upscale out of the eBay ecosystem.
Not that there is anything wrong with that but surely as a business they should be exploring other routes to market.
As pointed out above, if you weren't a contractor then a 100k salary/profit for a business like this would be incredible. Is their value in the business itself??? Probably. But the thing with EBay is others can easily replicate the basic business. I haven't bothered to look, but Goofbay has a great tool for analysing an eBay account to see what they've sold, fees etc
Jesus. What a headache. 200000 feedback in last 12 months
£6m turnover. £1.2m in VAT. £500k in Ebay Fees.
Postage £2 per package, so assume £400k and a profit margin of 30% maximum on CDs/DVDs leaves a GP of £1.44M minus 900k Fees and Postage for £544k profit before 40 staff(10k each) and warehousing, rates, bills etc etc.
Rather be a contractor.
Thing is, a lot of these eBay success stories don't seem to be able to upscale out of the eBay ecosystem.
Not that there is anything wrong with that but surely as a business they should be exploring other routes to market.
£2 for p&p a DVD is about 3X what it actually costs but for small items like that the amount of work has to be pretty substantial. OTOH if you can't be a contractor and don't want to be a clerk or whatever, it's a way to genuinely make your own business.
Another year and another pro-eBay story in the news.
Interestingly, the business profiled sells CD, DVD's, Games etc which are sold by almost every UK retailer imaginable but still has a healthy turnover.
Profitability can't be that low on these items then as he has a staff of 40 with a turnover of £6m and projected growth of 100%+.
Jesus. What a headache. 200000 feedback in last 12 months
£6m turnover. £1.2m in VAT. £500k in Ebay Fees.
Postage £2 per package, so assume £400k and a profit margin of 30% maximum on CDs/DVDs leaves a GP of £1.44M minus 900k Fees and Postage for £544k profit before 40 staff(10k each) and warehousing, rates, bills etc etc.
If you are dedicated and put the hard work in, no reason not to make a decent living. It's probably boring but for someone who isn't a high earning professional, it's quite aspirational to have such low barriers to entry compared with getting a real shop.
Interestingly, the business profiled sells CD, DVD's, Games etc which are sold by almost every UK retailer imaginable but still has a healthy turnover.
Profitability can't be that low on these items then as he has a staff of 40 with a turnover of £6m and projected growth of 100%+.
I went to Vision Express last week and found a nice pair of glasses priced at £150.
Enquired if that included lenses.... it doesn't, that's another £140
Isn't the idea NOT to do it yourself but get someone else in for £7 per hour to do admin, pack and post goods - leaving you to invoice the £400 per day?
Isn't the idea NOT to do it yourself but get someone else in for £7 per hour to do admin, pack and post goods - leaving you to invoice the £400 per day?
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