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Previously on "Making your first ebay million"

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  • psychocandy
    replied
    Originally posted by eek View Post
    Just refund them with an apology that it was a stock issue.
    Funnily enough made a few quid selling TV tuner things for the old GBA. They were about £30 normally but I found somewhere selling them for £9, so I sold them for £20 on ebay.

    Did try getting them send direct as a gift but the people at suppliers left the original invoice in once. Had some fella email me and telling me he was going to report me to the police for fraud cos he'd paid £20 and I'd obviously paid £9.

    Told him he better report Tesco as well then because I'm sure they paid less for their cornflakes than they were selling them to him !!!!

    He kept on and send me a few more threatening emails but eventually gave up and I never heard from him again.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dearnla
    replied
    Flogging stuff on eBay? I can think of easier things to do, like Contracting

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    PS Mind you, I was bit annoyed when I gave an old dresser to Christian Aid last month and they sold if for £230.
    A mate of mine misread an advert in the local paper for a Welsh cross-dresser, looking for a new home.

    He had the shock of his life when Barry turned up.

    Leave a comment:


  • backagain
    replied
    Originally posted by xoggoth View Post
    Not just eBay, I am amazed at the things people sell. Looking at ads in a local free paper today, set of used wood screws, £4. Must be hardly worth the hastle of placing the ads. Some people are either very hard up or very mean.

    PS Mind you, I was bit annoyed when I gave an old dresser to Christian Aid last month and they sold if for £230.
    And £220 quid would be administration for Christian Aid, with the remaining £10 actually be aid?

    Leave a comment:


  • Clippy
    replied
    Originally posted by SneakySimon View Post
    True - though got to be a hassle as when I sent it direct from Amazon, people realised where it was from and realised they had paid £10 too much - not my problem but did give my feedback score a hammering!!

    But I don't know how you make loads of ££££££ from eBay - you see some guys with massive feedback scores but always seems like too much hassle to me what with the dumb ass questions, the fees etc.
    I think a lot of these are sellers selling cheap items (sub £10) like mobile phones cases, chargers, usb leads etc where if the item is of a poor quality the buyer won't really bother requesting a refund as it is more expense (and hassle) than the item is actually worth.

    Margins are tight but the seller needs to sell in volume which eBay is ideal for.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by eek View Post
    A few years back, my sister in law paid for her wedding by buying suitable oversize lady clothing and sell it to transvestites. I believe an MF of Hampshire was a regular customer.
    I used to know a lady with a pricey wimmin's clothes shop. She made a good percentage of her profits selling to transvestites and even hosted parties for them.

    Her hubby wasn't impressed, but couldn't complain at the amount of cash coming in.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by SneakySimon View Post
    True - though got to be a hassle as when I sent it direct from Amazon, people realised where it was from and realised they had paid £10 too much - not my problem but did give my feedback score a hammering!!

    But I don't know how you make loads of ££££££ from eBay - you see some guys with massive feedback scores but always seems like too much hassle to me what with the dumb ass questions, the fees etc.
    My guess is automating is the key. And then throw what's left of support to somewhere cheap abroad or students at £3 an hour.

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by SneakySimon View Post
    True - though got to be a hassle as when I sent it direct from Amazon, people realised where it was from and realised they had paid £10 too much - not my problem but did give my feedback score a hammering!!
    They don't call you SneakySimon for nothing!

    Leave a comment:


  • SneakySimon
    replied
    Ebay

    True - though got to be a hassle as when I sent it direct from Amazon, people realised where it was from and realised they had paid £10 too much - not my problem but did give my feedback score a hammering!!

    But I don't know how you make loads of ££££££ from eBay - you see some guys with massive feedback scores but always seems like too much hassle to me what with the dumb ass questions, the fees etc.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by SneakySimon View Post
    Maybe made £5 per box-set but risky as the price at Amazon may go up!!
    Just refund them with an apology that it was a stock issue.

    Leave a comment:


  • SneakySimon
    replied
    eBay Money

    I had an ex who used to make easily £1000 per month on eBay.

    She was into old toys, especially My Little Pony and would religously go to all the local car boots buying the Ponys and also various other toys such as Action Man etc. She them cleaned them up, popped them on eBay and made her money. Some of the Ponies could sell for £150 each if she got the right ones.

    She reckoned eventually she could quit her normal job and do that soley - not sure if she ever did.

    I used to make a few quid by selling DVD box sets. I would check the price on Amazon and then stick in a price a bit more on eBay, do a 'buy it now' price and wait for the bids. When I got them, I would order the DVD's from Amazon and get them to send it as a gift. Maybe made £5 per box-set but risky as the price at Amazon may go up!!

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    Originally posted by eek View Post
    A few years back, my sister in law paid for her wedding by buying suitable oversize lady clothing and sell it to transvestites. I believe an MF of Hampshire was a regular customer.

    With the ongoing obesity problem, oversized clothing will soon become classed as normal sized and those of us able to stop stuffing our face all day will soon have to shop online for specialist 'skinny freak' clothing.

    A plan B in a few years may be to sell all those clothes that no longer fit to the skinny freaks at an inflated price.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    A few years back, my sister in law paid for her wedding by buying suitable oversize lady clothing and sell it to transvestites. I believe an MF of Hampshire was a regular customer.

    Leave a comment:


  • gingerjedi
    replied
    One of my mates spent a year just outside of Boston in the USA, his wife was working on a green card but he wasn't allowed so he sold stuff on eBay to pass the time.

    He used to buy clothing from local factory outlet stores and sell for a healthy profit, I guess it helps if your average citizen is even thicker than our own indigenous population.

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    I used to do a bit of trading when on the bench as a way of getting away from IT to recharge my batteries. Found it more profitable to do car boot sales and local markets than via ebay. Depends on the products of course.

    Benefits of car booting:

    a. cash in hand
    b. less competition (check out what others are selling before deciding on stock lines)
    c. less hassle with returns, if you don't go back to the same place too regularly

    At the peak I was doing 4 or 5 car boots or market stalls a week and turning over almost as much as contracting, though obviously net profit was somewhat lower.

    I almost felt like Scarface as I walked into my bank to deposit the cash every other day.

    Not done it for about 5 years so no idea if the opportunity is the same.

    Leave a comment:

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