on 18-01-2018 01:42 PM
Hi all,
It's fairly quiet here since just before Xmas.
Is this the norm, of perhaps just a trend with our type of product at this particular time?
No concerns. Just still learning and understanding it all.
In any event, best wishes for a great year for you all.
Melina.
on 20-01-2018 11:35 PM
We downgraded the smaller store from featured to basic mid year. Once we did this the store seemed to have more natural ebbs and flows of sales without any artificial limits.
The suprise is the main store. I have mentioned a number of times that this stores sales vay less than 1% on average every month, regular as clock work. This store has seen sales increases of around 50% since the start of the year and i am not getting the two quiet days following a good day like normal. Either somethings broken or deliberatly turned off at the moment. It would be nice if stayed that way but i,m not holding my breath.
on 21-01-2018 10:09 AM
I guess we're lucky in a way. This is not our living, like so many others. It's sort of the culmination of a life long hobby, but serious one, for the boys. But, with thousands of pipes to move on I often wonder if there's enough time, the way things are here at times.
Surprisingly another platform was doing well for us, but it's quietened right off too. Can't be coincidence.
it is pleasing though, to see others doing well and beating eBay at some of the ridiculous policy they've introduced since we were last here. It's not easy and successful sellers deserve every piece of kudos that's out there.
plodding along!
Melina.
21-01-2018 11:15 AM - edited 21-01-2018 11:18 AM
@clubesquire wrote:I guess we're lucky in a way. This is not our living, like so many others. It's sort of the culmination of a life long hobby, but serious one, for the boys. But, with thousands of pipes to move on I often wonder if there's enough time, the way things are here at times.
Surprisingly another platform was doing well for us, but it's quietened right off too. Can't be coincidence.
it is pleasing though, to see others doing well and beating eBay at some of the ridiculous policy they've introduced since we were last here. It's not easy and successful sellers deserve every piece of kudos that's out there.
plodding along!
Melina.
We where full time ebayers 3 or 4 years ago and like you have accumilated thousands of items of stock over the years. We would buy complete businesses out when they shut, sell off a few gems to get our money back and then plod along with the left overs. Now we have a shipping container full of stock ( and half of the garage ) , that doesnt really owe us much.
We have not made any large stock purchases for 2 years and are just working through the stuff we have on hand. Like you I worried we would never clear it, but its starting to disappear. Some of our stock becomes obsolete in time so, we are concentrating mainly on those items and keeping most of the collectable stuff to sell last as that stock is holding value or even increasing with time.
I expect it will take another two years to clear most of it and then it might be time for a radical cull and bonfire. It is good at the moment though, because after ebay fees, all of the money goes into the pocket. No stock purchase costs to worry about.
I,m even getting twitchy about maybe going out and sourcing some more bulk purchases ( thats the hoarder tendancy kicking in.......... ), but need to empty the shipping container to house my " collection" of old motorcycles.
My sheep grazing business is growing and will be a fulltime income within two years, so I am looking forward to winding down on ebay and having a bit of a rest. Its been a pretty intense ride the last few years.
on 21-01-2018 11:42 AM
@clubesquire wrote:I guess we're lucky in a way. This is not our living, like so many others. It's sort of the culmination of a life long hobby, but serious one, for the boys. But, with thousands of pipes to move on I often wonder if there's enough time, the way things are here at times.
Surprisingly another platform was doing well for us, but it's quietened right off too. Can't be coincidence.
it is pleasing though, to see others doing well and beating eBay at some of the ridiculous policy they've introduced since we were last here. It's not easy and successful sellers deserve every piece of kudos that's out there.
plodding along!
Melina.
I will start by saying that I know nothing about pipes, but I do know a bit about collecting.
If you have thousands of pipes then I would assume that some would be at the lower end of the condition scale.
Over the years I have seen a way that some sellers offload lower quality items they have collected. What they do is put together “starter sets” for people who are just starting off on their collecting journey. What they do is list a number of items of lesser quality in one listing so that a member can kick-start their collection at an affordable price. I have seen this with coins, banknotes, stamps, and other items (including cameras).
Those who are just starting out on their collecting journey are not interested in collecting the highest priced items from the very start. They will revel in the odd high quality purchase at a good price, but for the main they are just interested in building their collection and possibly buying “space fillers” regardless of the quality. For example, I guess from an earlier post of yours, that Dunhill is a brand of pipe. Someone starting out may just want a Dunhill pipe without paying too much. This is where you might help them by making a lesser quality Dunhill pipe available as part of a bulk purchase of 5 different brands of pipe.
Collectors tend to be a funny breed. They tend to treasure their first purchases and have a fondness for them and can tell you everything about that item. I know that I still have the first K1000 camera I was able to buy, it cost me $92.50 and has a stock number crudely engraved on the back. It was used in a CSIRO lab for photographing specimens. If I was to put all my K1000 cameras out in a line I would be able to pick out my first one from all the others in a heartbeat, even without being able to see the backs of the cameras. It is far from perfect, but I use it as my everyday camera . . . . . the one I turn to when I want to shot a roll of film, the one I turn to when I just want to sit and pretend I am shooting film by firing the shutter and winding-on. It’s the one I took to Broken Hill to shoot the sunset over the Mundi Mundi plains. It’s my baby!
I would imagine that pipe collectors might just think along the same lines i.e. sometimes they just want to sit and hold a pipe for the joy that holding brings them, and it doesn’t have to be the best pipe, it may even have some cracks.
Just a thought, seeing as you have thousands of pipes to move.
on 21-01-2018 12:00 PM
You could always buy a second shipping container.
Don't rely too much on the sheep. They have their ups and downs, even worse than ebay sometimes!
on 21-01-2018 01:46 PM
I am selling heaps, just not on ebay. Yard sale, market, FB and Gumtree. Of course I have got an entire house to sell off before 20th April.
Shame none of you book sellers live near me, I have a huge collection, mostly fantasy, to get rid of and they are the one thing nobody is buying.
on 21-01-2018 02:07 PM
@brerrabbit585 wrote:You could always buy a second shipping container.
Don't rely too much on the sheep. They have their ups and downs, even worse than ebay sometimes!
I have thought about buying a couple more shipping container. The trouble is three of anything is a collection isnt it ????
I,ve had a few sheep for the last 35 years. The first mob I purchased was in 1981 when I had only recently left school......................... You may remember the drought of 1982....... ..........The feed ran out and I ended up shooting a number of the weaker ones. The best where sent to market where they made fifty cents with a bill for $1.20 for freight.
I also had quite a few hundred sheep in the wool collapse of the late 1980,s - early 1990,s. and was part of the infamous " flock reduction scheme". In many ways that was worse as the sheep where healthy but totally worthless. . The council sent a big excavator out to dig a huge hole and .........well you get the picture. You cant go through that experience without being affected and it still haunts me.
Then there was the mouse plague where the mice ate every scrap of vegitation in the paddock. At night the sheep would sit down and the mice would nest in their wool to stay warm. There where other things the mice did to the sheep, but I wont mention them in polite company.
Strangely enough, the young blokes today dont want to work with sheep. They would much rather sit in a computersied, climate controlled tractor cab and listen to music or chat on facebook, while the tractor drives itself. Like blacksmithing and video shops the skills of sheep grazing are slowly being lost.
The result of all of this is that Australian and global sheep numbers are at record lows. This has resulted in a shortage of wool and prime lamb, with the result that prices have jumped around 50% in a year to record highs. I have spent the last three years breeding up a nice flock of 1000 young breeding ewes that are just coming into their prime. With any luck I can catch the market peaks over the next few years, pay my debts off and semi retire in around 5 years time. Thats the plan anyway. Heres hoping the seasons hold.
Anyway I,m off now to deliver a new company car to my son, so that he can check the water troughs on our remote property 250 km. away.............A 2000 model Holden Jackaroo 4wd. I found for $200 on gumtree. It cost me more than that to register it.....I,m just crossing my fingers that it gets me there safetly..........
on 21-01-2018 03:28 PM
@chameleon54 wrote:
@brerrabbit585 wrote:You could always buy a second shipping container.
Don't rely too much on the sheep. They have their ups and downs, even worse than ebay sometimes!
I have thought about buying a couple more shipping container. The trouble is three of anything is a collection isnt it ????
I,ve had a few sheep for the last 35 years. The first mob I purchased was in 1981 when I had only recently left school......................... You may remember the drought of 1982.......
..........The feed ran out and I ended up shooting a number of the weaker ones. The best where sent to market where they made fifty cents with a bill for $1.20 for freight.
I also had quite a few hundred sheep in the wool collapse of the late 1980,s - early 1990,s. and was part of the infamous " flock reduction scheme". In many ways that was worse as the sheep where healthy but totally worthless. . The council sent a big excavator out to dig a huge hole and .........well you get the picture. You cant go through that experience without being affected and it still haunts me.
Then there was the mouse plague where the mice ate every scrap of vegitation in the paddock. At night the sheep would sit down and the mice would nest in their wool to stay warm. There where other things the mice did to the sheep, but I wont mention them in polite company.
Strangely enough, the young blokes today dont want to work with sheep. They would much rather sit in a computersied, climate controlled tractor cab and listen to music or chat on facebook, while the tractor drives itself. Like blacksmithing and video shops the skills of sheep grazing are slowly being lost.
The result of all of this is that Australian and global sheep numbers are at record lows. This has resulted in a shortage of wool and prime lamb, with the result that prices have jumped around 50% in a year to record highs. I have spent the last three years breeding up a nice flock of 1000 young breeding ewes that are just coming into their prime. With any luck I can catch the market peaks over the next few years, pay my debts off and semi retire in around 5 years time. Thats the plan anyway. Heres hoping the seasons hold.
Anyway I,m off now to deliver a new company car to my son, so that he can check the water troughs on our remote property 250 km. away.............A 2000 model Holden Jackaroo 4wd. I found for $200 on gumtree. It cost me more than that to register it.....I,m just crossing my fingers that it gets me there safetly..........
I remember the drought of 1982 all too clearly, made worse by the floods in 1981 ruining a lot of feed. I think dad sold all the sheep in 1977 but we still had about 400 cattle to feed. We used to take the cows out on the road and all the roadsides around us were squeaky clean - something you can't do these days even if you are a long way from town. I remember the days of the sheep pits even though we had no sheep at the time. We had a left-over bale of wool that never got sent off with the rest and after my father died in '86 we took it to the local wool brokers and got quite a pleasant surprise.
My father had two sayings in relation to farming - always halve your expected income and double the expenses; and, when everyone else is running east, you need to run west - both learnt from experience. He had an 'out paddock' of about 600 acres at Terip Terip that he cleared with a massive bulldozer (for its time) and then he grew potatoes. He found out the hard way that if potatoes were a good price you didn't plant any that year because everyone else would and there'd be a glut and they'd be worthless. You waited till prices hit rock bottom and then planted them because nobody else would bother. I was too young to remember him growing potatoes, or even selling that farm. Land was a lot cheaper back then and you could make decent money from sheep, but it didn't last.
on 21-01-2018 04:45 PM
Thanks K1. It's a great idea and not something we'd given any thought to.
I'll be giving it a whirl soon. I think it can work.
I'm chuffed. Thank you 🙂
Melina.
on 21-01-2018 04:59 PM
@clubesquire wrote:Thanks K1. It's a great idea and not something we'd given any thought to.
I'll be giving it a whirl soon. I think it can work.
I'm chuffed. Thank you 🙂
Melina.
just make it clear in any listing that these are “collection starters”, and mention any obvious flaws