![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ben
I’m not going to keep playing tennis with you (going back and forth and back and forth and back and forth on this thread) kids play that game and i ain’t no kid! I will no longer be responding to your comments!!! And I would appreciate the same from you!! Bye Felicia! Last edited by homerunhitter; 01-04-2023 at 09:23 PM. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
![]() |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ok, so I was one of those sorting guys pre-factory set.
The local dealer bought vending cases, and "paid" four of us to assemble sets. Piecework and so much in trade per set. I sorted differently than the other three guys, and had a ton of cards laid out on the desk in number order for groups of 10. Plus a bunch of 10 card complete stacks. Hadn't turned in any sets yet, so I was "way behind" the other sorters... Then one day they had an order for 20 sets and offered a bonus to whoever got them together the quickest. Half an hour later I was done. Got a nice prewar card for myself with the bonus. ![]() When I was doing Ebay I did pretty well with cheap cards. (well before the fees made it impossible. ) Once the fees got too high, I moved to bulk lots, usually 400 cards for 9.99 or $5. I'd moved along most of the thousands of duplicates I had by the time people stopped buying random boxes of junkwax commons. Including one sale that was 15,000 cards I delivered locally at some really cheap price per thousand. I think it was maybe $50 for the whole batch. I could have done a lot more volume if I was more organized, or didn't try to give the buyers a good mix and just stuffed the first 400 I grabbed into the box. To me organization is the key because you can be way more efficient. Bens point about buying is also key. There are places that will buy any cards at all, but at insanely low prices. The local guys moved and sold about 2.5 million cards to one of them for I think it was 1000.... If you want to do it, try a bit, and find an angle or way of doing things that works for you. Hopefully it works out and makes you rich. |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
How about some simple math fun.
20 minimum wage employees after workers comp, insurance, matching taxes, and several other expenses is around $600K per year. Then add another $100K for rent and utilities. Then easily another $100K start up cost for equipment. we are at a measly $800K without any inventory. Then lets get crazy and say not including the above expenses we can make $1 profit per card selling only cheap junk. Lets also say someone is in the 1/10 of 1% of people that have all the skills needed to start and run a successful business long term. They would only have to sell 2,192 cards per day to break even. Seems doable to me. ![]() |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
The competition to acquire more and more cards is already out there, and with the recent price surges during the pandemic, more and more people are aware of these cards increased/increasing values, and not as prone to just give them away. And as others had opined, when you buy cards at the right/lowest prices is when you actually make your money. To me, the way to go about becoming a big card seller/dealer is to start out small, maybe just by yourself to begin with. And as others have said, use that trial period to figure out your own system/way of doing things, and see if you can be successful (ie: profitable). And if you succeed to that point, try expanding and going forward and building up the business. Otherwise, if you insist on being a bit-time seller/dealer right out of the gate, be sure to have a boatload of money (or a hell of a credit line) and be willing to spend it to acquire a big, desirable inventory, pray you can find (and retain) good, honest, qualified people to work with/for you, be sure to also find some good/ qualified support professionals to help set the business up and keep track of things going forward (attorney and accountant/CPA at least), and then hope to God that nothing drastic or bad happens or changes the economy, the hobby, or anything else you could have never reasonably predicted or expected, and that you otherwise have absolutely no control over. Not sure any of this is exactly secret. A lot of effort, desire, hard work, dedication, and especially a lot of luck, is the formula for pretty much every kind of business out there becoming a success. Possibly the easiest (but certainly not cheapest) way to go about getting into a successful, big-time card selling business is to find one that is already successful and operating, and simply buy it (if you even can). And then just pray you don't do something stupid to screw it up, or have something beyond your control happen to screw it up for you. |
#7
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
I just figured I would throw up a few realistic numbers. I understand how businesses work. I run an extremely successful one that let me retire in my early 40s. I believe the OP is just looking for a get rich quick scheme. He kept being very unrealistic and for some silly reason gave a list of sellers that sell all price ranges of cards and somehow wanted to focus on selling cheap garbage. You are correct about hiring a CPA. I complained all the time about their beyond silly bills. Then I got audited by everyone in the same year and was very happy I paid those silly fees. Not sure who I pissed off but seriously everyone who could audit me did. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
There is a local auction house in Northern Indiana selling cards on their own auction website.
When I've gone to pick up cards I've bought, they usually have 3-5 college students sitting at tables taking pics with their phone and writing a basic (often wrong) description. I bought a zip lock bag full of 1973 topps, mistyped as 1983 for $9. Got 2 G-VG Clementes and 2 Ryans, plus 300 other cards. I Bought a lot of 200 or so 1978's with 2 Murrays, a Trammel/Whitaker in G-VG for $3. Sometimes they take the time to list each individual junk era common. Since starting price is always $1 they might have 15% of the lots with no bids. So if you have the wrong people doing the data entry you can lose money pretty easily. |
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
I wish we had a better grading scale for low-end pre-war cards | Luke | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 14 | 02-25-2015 12:16 PM |
Slightly O/T: Secret to selling on eBay- 1 Day? | Deertick | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 14 | 05-01-2013 07:43 PM |
(All Sold) Selling large Legendary lot | Leon | Boxing / Wrestling Cards & Memorabilia Forum | 1 | 12-07-2012 08:07 AM |
Gigantically Huge trading list-- Large in Scale, Enormous in its Magnitude | Archive | Pre-WWII cards (E, D, M, etc..) B/S/T | 2 | 10-10-2008 10:52 AM |
Selling a large part of my collection..... | Archive | Ebay, Auction and other Venues Announcement- B/S/T | 2 | 08-10-2007 11:09 AM |