iSold It on eBay

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Collectors are selling treasures to pay bills PDF Print E-mail
Written by Editor   
Friday, 27 February 2009 09:25

Dealers say many are selling treasures to make ends meet, but few are buying
 
By Robert Annis
Posted: February 27, 2009

Harry Ford actually played with the first Star Wars toys he bought soon after seeing the original movie in 1977. Then his interest turned serious and, over the next 30 years, he amassed a collection of more than 2,000, many of them still in their boxes.

Now, after months on medical leave to treat pancreatic disease and faced with looming mortgage payments and bills, the 43-year-old Plainfield man has made a painful choice: He's putting his collection up for sale on Craigslist.

"It's like losing a family member," he said. "I've been a Star Wars fan for nearly my entire life. It's going to be tough letting go."

With joblessness hitting a 25-year high in Indiana and likely to worsen, Ford isn't the only one parting with a cherished collection.

Auction houses, sports card shops and collectibles dealers say they've noticed a huge increase in the number of people looking to sell their comic books, pottery and other collectibles. The bad economy dogs them even in their desperation, though: Few are buying.

"People need to eat more than they need to look at stuff," said Lisa Cornwell, co-owner of Earl's Auction Co., who has seen a 40 percent increase in collectibles business during the past year.

Dave Humes, manager of the I Sold It on eBay store in Fishers, said he's seen a marked change in his business during that same time.

"We've seen a big pickup in business, as well as a change in our customer base," Humes said. In the past, many of his customers had bought, say, a new cell phone and wanted to sell the old one. "Now we're seeing people who need money because they've been laid off."

Ford's home brimmed with Star Wars figures until his wife moved in. Then the collectibles were boxed up and put into storage. Now his garage and a nearby shed are testaments to his obsession, stacked floor-to-ceiling with dozens of cardboard boxes, each packed with toys.

From droids to Wookiees, he collected nearly every action figure issued, up until money started getting tight for the WXIN (Channel 59) employee. Most remain in pristine condition in their original packaging, including several rare figures that Ford figures are worth as much as $750 each. He hopes to get up to $20,000 for the collection but admits that's unlikely. He'll probably be forced to take whatever someone is willing to pay. Martinsville resident Christopher Goodnight, 28, knows the feeling. Last year, he said, he sold the bulk of his painstakingly amassed comic collection at Half Price Books for about a tenth of its value.

"I started getting into comics in 2004, and I fell for it hard," he said. "One time, I drove three hours down to Evansville to get an issue of 'Astonishing X-Men' I couldn't find in Indy."

Between losing his job last year and finding another at half the salary, Goodnight started falling behind on his bills. He'd just bought a used car, and it already needed new brakes.

His action-figure collection went for less than half of its $1,500 value on eBay, too little to solve his financial crunch. Seeing no other alternative, Goodnight kept about 200 comics, mostly X-Men and Daredevil, and sold the rest for $700.  "I probably could have gotten more if I would have sold it on eBay or something, but I needed the money right away," he said. "As soon as I'm able to get a new job and handle on my bill situation, I'm going to track down all the ones I sold."

Humes, the Fishers eBay store manager, has seen so many people trying to sell collections that he's had to become picky. He turns away most comics, baseball cards and die-cast NASCAR vehicles in favor of designer merchandise and vintage collectibles, such as Lionel trains. He's sold off some high-end stuff in the past few months: A watch collector recently asked him to sell about $20,000 worth of designer timepieces, and a vintage-guitar aficionado recently liquidated about half his collection. There's been a substantial rise in the number of people bringing in expensive Lladro and Hummel figurines.  People also are trying to unload what once seemed the hottest of collectibles.

"We're getting a lot of Beanie Babies," Humes said. "They're definitely selling low on their investment, although, let's face it, they were never coming back.

"It was just a craze at the time."

http://www.indystar.com/article/20090227/LOCAL0505/902270389

 
Online firm monitors your item, deals with buyers PDF Print E-mail
Written by Editor   
Thursday, 05 February 2009 09:33

February 5, 2009
By DAVID SHAROS For The Sun

The eBay Web site is among the most popular on the Internet. A few weeks ago on Black Friday, it was the most-visited site on the Web with an estimated 12 million hits. But for some of us, selling our used goods and house wares via the Internet just takes too much time.

A new Naperville business, which opened in late September, stands ready to help those legions of eBay users out. On Sept. 29, iSold It -- a new online selling service offering consumers an easy way to sell items on eBay or other online marketplaces -- opened its doors in Naperville. The store is the second for the company. Its Orland Park location opened almost two years ago. 

  Store owner Eric Czerwonka, 29, opened a Naperville location of iSold It on Sept. 29. The company helps people sell their unwanted possessions on the popular Web site eBay.
(Terence Guider-Shaw/For The Sun)

Store owner Eric Czerwonka, 29, said that as a University of Wisconsin undergrad, he tinkered with the Internet before going in a different career direction, but has now returned to his "roots."

"While I was in college, I did some work helping people with Web pages and posting stuff on the Web, but after graduating, I went to work for about four to five years in insurance," Czerwonka said. "I decided to move on from that and get into this business."

The iSold It concept essentially works as a middle man between the seller and eBay. Czerwonka said many folks don't have time to monitor the eBay sale and respond to bids, and also are reluctant about using credits cards online or risking other issues related to identity theft.

"Most people bring in their items to the store, and we get to look them over," he said. "People don't need an appointment. For the most part, we assume the items are what people say they are, and studies have shown that since people are buying those items from a store like ours and not an independent seller, the items are generally worth more."

Czerwonka said in addition to the eBay selling fee, the store charges 33 percent of the final selling price for its services but that most customers make all of that back. Big sellers, he said, have included things such as designer and brand-name items, which often don't go on sale. Clothes, baseball cards and comic books are among the slowest in terms of consumer interest.

"Because we often get more for goods, it offsets the fees people have to pay," he said. "There's also the issue of convenience, since we ship the items out and we handle any questions about the sale. Most online consignment businesses offer about a 50-50 split -- ours is more like 60-40."

Czerwonka said that currently, eBay has about 100 million registered users and believes his business will not fall victim to the problems faced by many of the so-called "dot-coms" that went under in the past decade.

"We're selling anywhere from 300 to 500 items a month for people, and we've opened a second store," he said. "With all the eBay users out there, and it being one of the No. 1 Web sites, we're pretty confident our service should be needed for a long time to come."

iSold It
Where: 4931 S. Route 59, No. 117, Naperville
Hours: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Friday; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.; closed Sunday
Call: 630-717-0615
Online: www.napervilleebay.com

http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/napervillesun/business/1413944,6_3_NA05_ISOLDIT_S1.article

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 February 2009 09:41
 
I Sold It on eBay is NOW BUYING Your Used CD's, DVD's and Video Games for Cold Hard Cash!! PDF Print E-mail
Written by editor   
Sunday, 01 February 2009 09:03

iSolditgulfcoast operators of the iSold It on eBay stores in the Tampa Bay area announced today that beginning Thursday, January 22, the stores would now be buying customer's new/used CD's, DVD's, 
For_Immediate_Release:

United States of America (Press Release) January 31, 2009 --
The flagship ISoldIt offering is the In-Store for cash buyback program enabling all ISI stores to now buy new/used CD's, DVD's and console Video Game software for cash! Later the program offering will be extended to include additional consumer products like video game consoles, cell phones, and digital music players similar to ISI's internet only program. The nationwide In-Store for cash offering is rolled out this week with the four area I Sold It on eBay stores in Tampa, St. Petersburg, Palm Harbor and Sarasota.

The customer should bring their new/used CD's, DVD's and console VideoGame software into the store where the associate will scan the item and through the use of the proprietary BuyWare software, I Sold It will make a cash offer anything that has value. Even if the disc is damaged an offer will be made if the case is pristine. I Sold It will offer to pay cash on the spot for the items.  Watch TV commercial

Tom Finkbiner, owner of iSolditgulfcoast, today in an announcement said "I Sold It has long been a leader in allowing consumers to cash in on no longer used or excess household and commercial items, with fifteen thousand customers having been paid more than $2 million during the last three years through sales on eBay and other electronic sites. Our agressive rollout of the In-Store for Cash buyback offering allows draw new customers into our stores by bringing in his or her no longer used CD's, DVD's and console Video game software in the original jewel case and walk out with cash!"

I Sold It on eBay has stores in Tampa, St. Petersburg, Palm Harbor and Sarasota. For more information please refer to the iSolditgulfcoast.com. website.
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 01 September 2009 09:28
 
Wall Street Journal - Hiring Middlemen to Sell Stuff on eBay PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wall Street Journal   
Thursday, 29 January 2009 17:05

In this era of downsizing, we decided we need to do some of our own by getting rid of some household stuff via eBay -- and snaring some needed cash in return. But since we're online-auction neophytes, we turned to so-called trading assistants -- firms that will list and manage sales on eBay for a fee.

First we had to find one. There's been a lot of consolidation in the trading-assistant industry. And the ones that are left have gotten a lot choosier about what they'll try to sell. Items that won't garner much cash just aren't worth it for firms to try to unload -- the seller-for-hire companies have to put in the same amount time, effort and expense whether the item sells for $75 or $1,000.

[eBay Illustration] Hal Mayforth

The services take your item and do all the legwork: research the price, write the description, post it on eBay, field the email responses, monitor the auction, ship the items and collect the checks. They take a hefty commission, ranging from 23% to 45%, depending on the company and the price range.

We enlisted trading assistants to help us sell a range of items, including a couple of unopened iPods, a set of plates, an elephant tea set and a couple of toaster ovens sitting in our basement. We got mixed results. On average, it took a month, start to finish, to get any cash for our stuff; commissions ate significantly into whatever money we did get. New electronics sold, but our other stuff didn't. That said, when it worked, it was nice to get cash for things without going through any hassle ourselves.

With three of the four companies we tried, the process itself ran smoothly, if slower than we expected. We started with an iSold It franchisee in Norwalk, Conn., part of a nationwide franchise with 86 stores in 48 states. This iSold It doesn't pick up and will take only items they believe will bring in more than $75 (when items don't sell, the franchisee eats the initial eBay listing fee). They rejected the plates and the elephant tea set, but said they'd try to sell our slightly used Sanyo toaster oven. It went up on eBay but did not sell. Then we tried a one-year-old, never-used iPod Nano lying around our house. A month and a week later we had a check for $78.86 (the Nano 8GB fourth generation sells new for $149). Ken Sully, iSold It's president and chief executive, says that in the current economic crisis, the volume of the company's sales has gone up, but "the average selling price has gone down a little, from $125 to closer to $100."

Last Updated on Friday, 30 January 2009 09:18
 
Local eBay stores benefit from economic downturn PDF Print E-mail
Written by Editor   
Tuesday, 27 January 2009 12:12

KNOXVILLE (WATE) -- Despite nationwide sales being down over the holidays more than 30 percent, local iSold It stores are seeing a business boom.

Jay Busé is like many Americans looking to cash in of stuff they already have. "My wife has some china that she's had for over 50 years. It is just something that we had that we don't use and we could use the money," Busé says.

Thanks to a growing number of people like Busé, Jackie Jacobs' iSold It store is bucking the trend of businesses with declining sales. Instead, business at her store is good.  "We've had a 15 percent increase in December in the average selling price of the things on eBay we've been listing," Jacobs says.


iSold It is listing every day products like usual, but also seeing more high end products on the market. "We've seen a lot of designer purses and items like that that people bought when times were good and are now trying to get some money out of them," Jacobs says.

iSold It can benefit from the slumping economy in two ways. First, it can profit from people looking to pinch pennies on purchases. Second, it can profit from people looking to make money off items just sitting in their homes.

"There are people who say eBay is recession proof. When times are good, people buy more stuff and they have more to sell. On the other hand, when the economy is worse, people want more money," Jacobs says.  She expects business to pick up even more in the next couple of weeks when spring cleaning begins. 

http://www.wate.com/global/story.asp?s=9742536

Last Updated on Wednesday, 28 January 2009 08:46
 
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