Selling advice

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Re: Selling advice

Post by Deleted User »

Wonks wrote:No, that's 33.3% profit. Well done.

:bouncy:
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Re: Selling advice

Post by JohnS37 »

Probably right - they don't always know the value of what they have.
I remember Ted Turner of Wishbone Ash showing me his 1962 Gib 3-PU Black Beauty Les Paul and explaining that he had bought it from a pawn shop in Queensway, Bayswater for £55. Similarly, I bought my 1965 Deluxe Reverb for £52 from The Maniac Cash Buyer in Tooting. Great days! TT's axe would fetch five figures now easily, and I sold my Deluxe for £2K not long ago.
As far as selling on Ebay goes, I have always found that a really good description backed up with plenty of good photos works best.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Sam Spoons »

I suspect the days of 'Shonky Shop" bargains are well behind us now :frown:. The internet means your Cash Converters et al can easily find out the value of nearly everything. Sad but I have my £27.50, car boot sail Mountain D45 to reassure me such things were once possible......
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Enmore Audio »

Has anyone ever has any experience with selling items through Reverb.com?? -https://reverb.com/
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Arpangel »

Sam Spoons wrote:I suspect the days of 'Shonky Shop" bargains are well behind us now :frown:. The internet means your Cash Converters et al can easily find out the value of nearly everything. Sad but I have my £27.50, car boot sail Mountain D45 to reassure me such things were once possible......

Yes, the dreaded interweb had destroyed everything, I certainly won't be getting an EDP Wasp for £10, a Juno 6 for £40, and a pair of Quad 11 valve amp's for £45 again anyntime soon. My best find was a pair of Rogers BBC LS3/5a speakers for £3, perfect working order.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Martin Walker »

:shock:
Arpangel wrote:My best find was a pair of Rogers BBC LS3/5a speakers for £3, perfect working order.

:wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf:
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Arpangel »

Martin Walker wrote::shock:
Arpangel wrote:My best find was a pair of Rogers BBC LS3/5a speakers for £3, perfect working order.

:wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf:

Yes, they were buried under a pile of old clothes on the floor, and looked like a pair of cheap music centre speakers, until I had a closer look, I said how much for the speakers? the guy said three quid, I didn't haggle!
Another great find was an Onkyo amplifier, a real beast, 90 watts per channel, twin transformers, a massive thing, plus a matching graphic EQ, and tape deck, all for £18!
I had that amp for years, and it sounded superb. You just don't see stuff like that anymore.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by James Perrett »

Some people can't be bothered with looking up prices on the internet or selling on Ebay - they just want rid of something. Those are the people you need to be looking for if you want a bargain. A friend of mine saw a Juno 6 at a boot sale for £15 not long ago so bargains still exist.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by BigRedX »

James Perrett wrote:Some people can't be bothered with looking up prices on the internet or selling on Ebay - they just want rid of something. Those are the people you need to be looking for if you want a bargain. A friend of mine saw a Juno 6 at a boot sale for £15 not long ago so bargains still exist.

But £15 is probably all it is worth. Let's face it no one in the early 80s went out and bought a Juno 6 because that's what they really wanted. They bought it because they couldn't afford a Prophet or an Oberheim. Certainly everyone I knew at the time would much rather have had something with a better sound and programmable memories, but they ended up with the Juno 6 because it was the cheapest polyphonic synth available.

Also by now it will probably need a lot of expensive repairs to keep it functioning. Yes £15 is about the right price for one.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by James Perrett »

BigRedX wrote: But £15 is probably all it is worth. Let's face it no one in the early 80s went out and bought a Juno 6 because that's what they really wanted. They bought it because they couldn't afford a Prophet or an Oberheim. Certainly everyone I knew at the time would much rather have had something with a better sound and programmable memories, but they ended up with the Juno 6 because it was the cheapest polyphonic synth available.

Also by now it will probably need a lot of expensive repairs to keep it functioning. Yes £15 is about the right price for one.

Erm - I bought one because it was what I wanted. It was better than my Electro Harmonix mini synth and was great for adding extra textures to the music I was doing. It is still going strong and the only repair I've done has been to fix a cracked connector PCB. Given the comments that I get from various studio users when they see it, I'd guess there are quite a few people who would pay much more than £15 for one.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by TJ1 »

Just out of interest - what would stop an unscrupulous dealer selling an item for a price that they then 'under-reported' to the seller?

I'd assume that they might be situations where the dealer needs to be given some flexibilty over price negotiations with the buyer - which is where I would guess the above abuse could occur.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Arpangel »

James Perrett wrote: Thu Sep 26, 2019 2:26 pm Some people can't be bothered with looking up prices on the internet or selling on Ebay - they just want rid of something. Those are the people you need to be looking for if you want a bargain. A friend of mine saw a Juno 6 at a boot sale for £15 not long ago so bargains still exist.

Very strange times we seem to be going through James, I know people that have put very good stuff on the garden wall, for people to take, or as you say, can’t be bothered to sell it, even though they know how much it’s worth.
I’m wondering if the influx of very cheap, but good new gear, has devalued a lot of secondhand stuff, making it not worth bothering with.
I like buying the older stuff, simply because it sounds better than a lot of expensive gear today.
Juno 6? Yes, I swapped a pair of Celestion hi-fi speakers for one, worth about forty quid!
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Hugh Robjohns »

Must be a dull day! You've resurrected an 18-month old post... :lol:
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Re: Selling advice

Post by OneWorld »

'A lucky find?'

Some years ago, I was just walking out the door of the post office and there was a £20 note on the ground, being the fine upstanding citizen that I am, I handed it in at the counter. About 200 yards down the road, I found a £10 note and thought "Well, what am I supposed to do with this, my lucky day or what, is someone sending me a message?"

I was across the road from the mini-market so went in and bought some bits and bobs, I had about £2 left so I bought a lottery ticket, and won £100!!!!!
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Re: Selling advice

Post by garrettendi »

I had to sell my Alesis Forge kit the other day on Facebook. Cost £500 roughly new, and at first offered it for £200. Then £150. Then finally I looked it up on eBay, saw some people had managed to buy them for peanuts, and eventually sold it on Facebook for £60.

The buyer got an absolute bargain. Meanwhile I'm feeling disheartened at how little electronic drum kits retain their value. Especially as all the low end kits now have mesh pads!
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Wonks »

Hugh Robjohns wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 10:29 am Must be a dull day! You've resurrected an 18-month old post... :lol:

Well, it's a sticky so should really be kept alive if it's to be kept relevant.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Drew Stephenson »

garrettendi wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 11:20 am I had to sell my Alesis Forge kit the other day on Facebook. Cost £500 roughly new, and at first offered it for £200. Then £150. Then finally I looked it up on eBay, saw some people had managed to buy them for peanuts, and eventually sold it on Facebook for £60.

The buyer got an absolute bargain. Meanwhile I'm feeling disheartened at how little electronic drum kits retain their value. Especially as all the low end kits now have mesh pads!

I find that's the wrong way to look at things. I rationalise it by saying to myself, "I considered item Y to be worth amount X at the time I bought it." (otherwise I wouldn't have). "I have now used Y as much as want to / need to / can. Therefore it no longer has value to me. If it is valueless, then any cash I can get for it is a bonus."
The world moves on, what something was worth a few years ago is not just different to what it is now, it's irrelevant. Therefore any comparison is also irrelevant.
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Re: Selling advice

Post by garrettendi »

blinddrew wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 1:56 pmI find that's the wrong way to look at things. I rationalise it by saying to myself, "I considered item Y to be worth amount X at the time I bought it." (otherwise I wouldn't have). "I have now used Y as much as want to / need to / can. Therefore it no longer has value to me. If it is valueless, then any cash I can get for it is a bonus."
The world moves on, what something was worth a few years ago is not just different to what it is now, it's irrelevant. Therefore any comparison is also irrelevant.

Wise words! Thank you kindly!
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Re: Selling advice

Post by DonMilan »

annac wrote: Mon Jun 13, 2011 10:32 am The tips are intelligent for marketing. i just would like to add that in selling, give value to customer service. That's one way of keeping and attracting customers or buyers on your side.

Totally spot on here. I'm curious though as I've struggled to sell some of my old (bought them new) Deadbeat, and other off brand beginner pedals and haven't gotten any hits on them. FB marketplace and a few other places listed. Helpful thread otherwise! I have half a mind to go to Guitar Center and take the pennies I may get back on them, but I'd love to sell and keep whatever $$ I can get for my own gear on whatever platform it needs to be sold on. I always find selling to friends in person is the best, despite the obligatory price knock. Any further tips??
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Re: Selling advice

Post by Drew Stephenson »

Every time I've sold anything on FB marketplace I've initially had zero interest. Then, after a few weeks, I've had a flurry of contacts. It's almost like stuff gets circled round the loop to the top again.
This may be nothing more than coincidence, but unless you need the cash in a hurry, I'd say patience was your friend.
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