Garage Sale

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How Do You Start a Garage Sale and Profit from It?

Well, I absolutely know nothing about this topic. Garage sale does not fall in the area of my expertise. However, I found this article in a business package I had received six, seven years ago. I found it "sleeping heavily" between my documents. I read it and then thought of that it could be useful to make it a lens here.

This lens proves that you can even make lenses from topics that you do not know great deal about. All that you may need to use is a kind of passion to remove the clouds from your eyes and use this topic or that to best fit the purpose from publishing it.

This means that visionary reading in any article even if you do not know great deal of the topic could help you invent, recreate or add some spices to the topic in the focus to get it published and be useful to the Web.

How Do You Make Huge Profits with Garage Sales? 

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In this day and age, everyone seemingly knows how to put together and hold a garage sale. Yet is this is so, why is it that some people are lucky to gross $150 while others consistently make $1,500 or more from their garage sales.

Pick almost any city or town in the country; drive through any middle class neighbourhood or residential area on any weekend. You are sure to spot at least half dozen garage sales. In addition to what's being sold at these garage sales.

What is being sold at these garages sales? The accumulated "junk" that many people no longer use or want taking up space in or around their homes.

Is it hard to hold a profitable garages sale? Not in the least! All it really takes is some of your time, and an awareness of a few merchandising tactics. However, to be really profitable, you must know how, and exercise careful planning.

First, let us look at some of the background. Everyone accumulates items that other people are searching for, and are willing to buy. These items range from discarded or outgrown items of clothing to furniture, tools, knick-knacks, pictures and toys.

Start Point to Think about Jumble Sales! 

Start by taking an inventory of all the things you have "just taking up space" around your home. Decide which items you would be better off getting rid of, and make a list of these things. These are the things you are going to put up for sale.

In addition, if you are honest about what you really want and need, the pile will grow if you look over your household a second and a third time! Remember that many garages sale offerings are items of merchandise purchased on impulse, and later found to be not what the buyer wanted.

It is the human condition: We discover too late that we do not like or have use for things purchased; we "outgrow" in size or taste articles that once fit, or pleased us. You will find that many items offered at garages sales are gifts that have been given to the seller, but not really suited to the recipient.

In other words, it will be to your benefit, before you stage your first garage sale, to take a week or so to browse through all the garages sales you can find.

Garage Sale Demands Energy and Concentration! 

The problem is, most people just do not have the time or energy to gather up all the items taking up space around their homes and staging a garage sale to get rid of them. Believe it or not, many people really do not know how to stage a garage sale; and a lot of people feel that putting on a garage sale is just too much bother and work.

This is where you enter the picture. Your enterprise will be an ongoing garage sale of items donated and collected from those people who lack the initiative to put on garages sales of their own. In other words, you can become a "liquidator or people's junk," via super garages sales that you promote.

We have already suggested that you spend a few weeks visiting the garages sales, swap meets and flea markets in your area. Your purpose will be to see what is being offered for sale, what the people in your area are buying, and how the merchandise is being sold. One of the things to notice is how the merchandise is being displayed.

You will also want to notice how the sellers handle customer browsing, and the prices they charge for the merchandise offered. You will find most items tagged with a price sticker, but generally, the seller is open to either price negotiation or a reasonable offer made by the customer.

Garage Sale Starts Your Enterprise! 

Begin your enterprise by cleaning out your own attic, closets, and basement or garage. Talk with your relatives and friends; tell them what you are doing, and ask for donations (or at least consignments) of unwanted items.

It is here that you will get your first experience in negotiating, and you will usually get enthusiastic cooperation. You'll find people explaining that they really don't have a use for a specific item, don't want to keep on sorting it, but for sentimental or other reasons they have just hung on to it.

Once you have a little bit of experience, you will be able to advertise in the newspaper that you purchase garages sale items, or take them on consignment for a percentage of the final sale price.

It is best that the wife or women of the house handle the garage sale itself - that is, let a woman be the one who greets the potential customers, shows them around, and generally engages them in conversation.

If it is a woman staging the garage sale, then arrangements should be made for a second one to "mind the store" while she is out digging up more items for display and sale. In addition, if your are running a really big sale, a second or third person can be very useful in selling, and just generally keeping an eye on things.

The advertising angle is really quite simple, and it should not cost you very much, either. Check area newspapers, and select the one that carries the most ads for garage sales. You should not concern yourself too much with competition from other ads. People who go to garage sales either go to all of them they can locate, or else only to those within a 3-to-5 mile radius of their homes.

Small Classified Could Help Your Garage Sale 

You should run a small classified ad in the newspaper of your choice for about three days in advance, and up through the day of your sale. Once you are operating on a fulltime, every-day-of-the-week schedule, you will want to change your ad schedule and the style of your advertising.

However, in getting started, stay with small classified ads simply announcing the fact that you are holding a garage sage, emphasizing that you have everything from A to Z - something of interest to everyone.

Such an ad might read:

BIG GARAGE SALE! Hundreds of interesting items.
Through Saturday, July 16th. (address)


To get ideas on how to write your ad, check your newspapers for a week or two. Cut out all the garage sale ads you can fin. Paste them up onto a piece of paper - then with a bit of critical analysis, you will be able to determine how to write a good ad of your own from identifying the good and bad features of the ads you've collected.

Keep in mind that the bigger and better your sale, the bigger and better your "getting started" ads should be. Always remember that in order to increase your profits in any business; you must increase rather than decrease your advertising.

At the bottom line, you will find that the greatest single reason for a garage sale failing to turn a profit is the lack of promotion and advertising used to publicize it.

Be Creative to Drive Traffic to Your Garage Sales 

You should also have an old-fashioned "sandwich board" type sign to display in front of your house when your garage sale is open for business. The purpose of course, is to call attention to the fact that you are holding a garage sale and are open for business.

This will pull in your neighbours, if you haven't already informed them, and attract people driving by. Sandwich boards are also sometimes set out at key traffic intersections not far from the site of the garage sale.

These will attract attention, and point the way. However, check your local ordinances to be sure that this sort of advertising is permitted.

Another "sign idea" practiced by a few really sharp operators, is the old "Burma Shave" type roadside pointers. Here, you simply make up a few cute sayings (verse or one-liners), write them on pieces of cardboard, tack them onto the power poles at about 200 yard intervals on the thoroughfare leading to your garage sale, and you are sure to create a lot of traffic for yourself.

People are amused by, and drawn people who do something a little different, unusual and creative in promoting a sale of any kind.

To come up with some cute verses, simply visit your public library and check out a book on limericks. Adapt the ones that you feel are most humorous, and start making signs. Again, a word of caution before you get too deeply involved: Be sure to check your local ordinance before you start mailing signs to power poles.

By all means, search out and use all the free bulletin boards in your area. It is better, and usually much more profitable to take the time to make up an attention circular you can post on these bulletin boards, than just to use a scribbled 3 by 5 card announcement.

Use Posters, Signs, and Bulletin Boards to Bring Folk to Your Garage Sale 

Pick up some "transfer lettering;" go through your newspapers and old magazines for interesting illustrations, graphics and pictures; then with a little bit of imagination and flamboyancy, make up an 8 1/2 by 11 poster announcement of your sale.

When you have it pasted up take it to any quick print shop and have them print up 50 or 100 for you. Your cost for this small print order should be well under ten dollars.

If you make this circular/poster up with versatility and long-time usage in mind, you can use it over and over again simply by pasting on a new date. In case you feel "left-out" when we talk of "pasting-up" things, this simply means pasting a piece of paper onto the overall page you are putting together.

Say you have made up your circular with a date of Wednesday, May 1st, and want to change it to read Thursday, July 16th. Rather than do the entire thing over, simply write out a new date with your transfer letters on a separate sheet of paper, cut this out to fit in the space occupied by the old date, and paste the new date over the old date.

The artwork master is now up to date; the printer does the rest. Incidentally, this is precisely what is meant in mail order and other dealership offers where they furnish you with the basic advertising/promotional material and advise you to "paste over" their name/address with your own.

For paste or glue, drop by just about nay stationery store and pick up a tube of "glue stick." This is a small tube of paste, about the size of a tube of lipstick, generally sold for less than one dollar per tube. The tube glue stick works much better than regular glue or paste, and is not as messy as rubber cement.

Your sings have to be effective, but you have to remember to keep them simple. Do not try to cut corners on your signs. Signs announcing and pointing the way to your garage sale should be placed at each intersection within a one-mile radius of your sale location. It takes 50 signs, and then makes 50 signs. The important thing is to let people know that you are holding a garage sale.

Signs can be made simply by cutting and using the sides of cardboard boxes, and writing on them with a heavy felt tip-marking pen. Make it easy for your signs to be seen, and for people to read what is on them. About all your really need is great big block letters reading "GARAGE SALE," with the street address, and an arrow pointing in that direction.

Don't think for a minute that people are going to stop and read a lot of "stuff" you have written on your sign when they are driving by; you just want them to see your sign and proceed in the direction necessary to reach the location of the sale. They will be moving by your sign too fast to see or read anything else you may have written.

The ads you place, the bulletin board announcement you post, and the signs you put up will bring many people to your garage sale location. A lot of people will drive by slowly and just look, but most will stop to browse around.

The "Inside Secrets" of Drawing People into Your Garage Sale 

But you still have to contend with the huge number of people who just drive by without stopping. So, let us talk about the "inside secrets" of drawing people into your sale, and the merchandising gimmicks that will result in the maximum number of sales for you.

You must call attention to your sale. Do not be shy, bashful or self-conscious about letting everybody for mail around know that you are having a garage sale. If you could afford to get the Goodyear Blimp to "hover" over your garage sale, then by all means, you should do it!

Some sharp operators do the next best thing. The rent miniature blimps, send them up above the housetops, and tether them there on their sale days. Of course, this giant balloon or miniature blimp has some sort of sign on the side of it, inviting people to your garage sale.

This is one of the strongest available advertising ideas for pulling traffic to a sale of any kind. For more details, write Pie-In-the-Sky Company, PO Box 5267, San Mateo, CA 94402, or explore to see if there is a local outlet for this kind of advertising merchandise for rent.

You have to give your sale some flair. Put some posts up across the front of your property and run some twisted crepe paper between them - or better than crepe paper, run brightly colored ribbons. Invest in some colourful pennants and fly them form temporary flagpoles. In addition, do not forget the balloons!

Make your garage sale a fund kind of event, with clusters of balloons anchored to your display tables and racks. Be sure to "float" them well above the heads of your customers as they are browsing through your merchandise displays.

Cover your display tables with colourful cloths. Do not hesitate to use bright colours and busy patterns. Regardless of what you sell, effective display (packaging the event) is still absolutely essential to your success.

The Secret to Outstanding Garage Sale Profits 

The secret to outstanding garage sale profits is in having the widest or largest selection of merchandise. And part of the process is taking great care in displaying and labelling your merchandise.

You cannot simply dump items haphazardly on a table, sit down, and expect to realize great profits. the people doing the most business and holding the most sales are the one with interesting displays, action and colour.

Have as wide a selection of colors as possible in your clothing racks, and mix them for "rainbow" effect. Make sure that your jewelry items shine and sparkle. Arrange them in and on jewelry boxes, jewelry ladders and other items sold for the purpose of showing off jewelry while keeping it neatly organized.

Some people have even gone so far as hooking up battery operated lazy susans and arranging their jewellery on these. Having the jewelry slowly turn on the lazy susan will not only catch the eye, it will catch the light, making an attractive display even more attractive because it sparkles and gleams.

Think about it, and then study the methods of display used buy the "rack jobbers" in the stores in your area. These are wire racks that usually hold card packages items. Such a rack or kind of display would lend itself beatifically for anchoring a cluster of balloons.

Keep these things in mind, and build your individual displays as part of the whole. Make it pleasing to the eye as well as convenient for your customer to browse through and select the items that appeal to them or catch their fancy.

At many garage sales, some of the merchandise (particularly the clothing) is dirty. Notice this when you visit other people's garage sales, and then take it upon yourself to make sure that every item - positively everything you show - is clean and sparkling bright.

A bar of soap, a bucket of water, and a few old rags will do wonders for shop tools, garden equipment and bicycles. The same goes for furniture polish on old furniture, and a run through the washing machine for all washable clothing.

It is advisable to determine a price for each item before you set it out for display. Then mark that price tag, and attach a price tag to each item. Your prices should also always be rounded off to more or less even numbers such as 25¢, 50¢, $1, $1.50, $2 and so on.

In other words, do not ask for 35¢, 95¢, or $1.98, or any of that sort of pricing. Almost needless to say, you should always mark particular item for $1, set a price of $2 or more on it. It's also a good idea to mark up your asking price from the bottom-line price you are willing to accept. Basically, the price marked on the price tag at most garage sales is taken as the starting price from which the buyer and seller negotiate.

Most garage sale promoters price their cheaper items at the bottom line price they will accept, and don't deviate from those $2 and over - they mark up their asking prices by 20 to 40 percent and use that margin for negotiating with the customer.

If you are a little bit shy relative to personal selling, here are a few "inside" secrets that will give you an edge: Always radiate an attitude of friendless, regardless of the circumstances or your first impression of the potential buyer. Always smile and say hello in a voice loud enough to be heard.

Speak to everyone stopping or dropping by your sale location. Be helpful, but allow the people to browse on their own until they specifically ask you for help. When you are "keeping an eye on your merchandise," be as unobtrusive as possible; no one likes to feel he is being watched too closely.

Whenever a customer appears to have made a selection and asks you what you will take for it, or what kind of a deal you will make for it, be ready to enter into "friendly negotiations."

Before you open, of course, you will have done your homework and know the value of each item of merchandise you have for sale. Do not ever take a customer's "claimed" value of an item. By the same token, do not listen to a seller, when you are buying items for your sale, when he claims that he's offering you an antique or priceless treasure.

Sometimes (rarely enough) you will be able to pick up fantastic treasures for virtually nothing; so by knowing your merchandise, you will not let "the flag that Betsy Ross made" slip through your fingers for a song. Be sure to have all possibly really valuable items appraised by authentic dealers. These people are listed in the yellow pages of your telephone directory.

Some of the "extras" that contribute to the success of a garage sale include plenty of change, because without proper change, you will lose a great many sales. A tape measure, because you'll find people often want to know the exact dimensions of something (especially furniture) in order to fit it into a certain space they have in mind. Long extension cord and electrical outlet, because your customers will want to "plug in" and try out the mixers, vacuum cleaners, hand tools, or other electrical appliances.

Back for a moment to drawing in those "cruisers" who are not quite sure they want to park their cars and come browse: Look for some kind of interesting or unusual item to call attention to your sale. Some of the displays we have seen along these lines include a horse-drawn surrey, a restored Model T and old farm plow. Anything of an unusual or interesting nature will do the trick for you.

One couple we know put up a display using a mannequin dressed in an old-time farm bonnet, long dress and apron. This display depicted a farmwoman of old, washing clothes with a scrub board and two steel washtubs. It is now hard to believe, this display really drew the crowds, and crowds always mean sales!

Go wherever your imagination takes you; you have to be different and distinctive. You will get lost in the hundreds of garage sales going on all around you if your sales look like the next half dozen.

If you'll take the time to employ a bit of imagination, and set your sales up with the kind of flair we have been talking about, you will not only draw the crowds; you'll be the one reaping the most profits.

As you thing of beginning this garage sale business, remember this: It is almost a compulsion with some women to go shopping - to search for interesting, and sometimes rare and valuable items. This fact alone will keep you as busy as you ever want to be staging and promoting garage sales.

The market is so vast, and the appetite so varied, that anything from a brass bedstead to a used diary of someone's long-forgotten grandmother will sell, and sell fast, at garage sales. Put it all together, use a little imagination and you will succeed in a very interesting, challenging endeavor!

How Do You Make Money on Garage Sales, Flea Markets and Swap Meets? 

Bagging Buyers Who Enjoy the Thrill of the Hunt!

Flea markets, or swap meets as they are also known, are the mother of all garage sales. For any of you that have not yet been initiated, they are nothing less than part discount store and part carnival.

Whether economic times are good or bad, flea markets remain the best place to buy almost anything for yourself or your home at affordable prices. That's why at the first sign of sun up on a Sunday morning the giant drive in theatre parking lot in El Cajon, California; the Orange County Marketplace in Costa Mesa, CA, or the Annex Antiques Fair and Flea Market in Manhattan come by the hundreds carrying flashlights before vendors have even finished setting out their merchandise.

Experienced shoppers theorize that by 9 a.m. the truly valuable items will already be gone. But still the carnival-like atmosphere keeps the crowds coming, and going, and coming. Buyers are poking among everything - records, chrome wheels, music cassettes, antique furniture, tools, car seats, saddles, World War I gas masks, porcelain dolls, fishing lures, doll furniture, T-shirts, stereos, polished rocks, quilts, sunglasses, and just when you think you've seen it all, a clown starts selling balloons!

As a Vendor, You Can Make Incredible Profits in a Short Time!

It has been estimated there are over 20,000 flea markets operating each weekend across America, totalling more than $5 billion dollars in sales.

Among the thousands of flea markets, the Rose Bowl market at Pasadena, California really stands out. That is probably because there are 3,000 dealers and, by mid-afternoon, over 50,000 shoppers, all of whom are there to find a treasure and the ultimate bargain.

The Rose Bowl market is an intimidating seven acres, and you would be amazed at what people buy. There are watches, antique fountain pens, pressed glass. Oriental rugs, Indian pottery, art, and weapons.. authentic dinosaur bones setting alongside old rusty metal doo-dads. No one, including the vendor, knows what the doo-dad is, but someone pays $25 for it anyway. From the buyer's point of view, he came looking for a genuine treasure, and this may be it! It seems incredible, but it seems people will buy anything!

Deciding What Items You Should Sell!

Aside from the size crowd, you can expect, flea markets, swap meets, and garage sales have something in common. Garage sale type items account for a part of the merchandise being sold at a swap meet, but homemade crafts and new merchandise are also widely available.

Many vendors purchase new products at below wholesale prices, and make huge profits. Those who have gone through the initiation process report earnings of up to $5,000 per weekend and more. The key to successful flea market sales is to display attractive, interesting, impulse buying merchandise at attractive prices. In addition, mixing second-hand pieces with new or more common items that sell well can be quite a challenge. However, once you get a feel for what people expect, and fill that niche in the market, you will be on your way to making more money in a single day than you ever thought possible.

How to Attract Thousands of Buyers to Your Garage Sale? 

There are hundreds, or in the case of the larger meets, even thousands of vendors who set up to sell their merchandise at flea markets. If you want to get the attention, and keep it, of everyone from those who showed up with flashlights to those entire families who came dressed up from church to browse, you must somehow stand out from the others.

Strategy is everything. For example, experienced shoppers usually make a reconnaissance tour along the outside circle of a flea market, knowing that the less experienced dealers are there. Then they slowly work their way inward to the more heavily trafficked middle section.

It also helps to know a little about the "history" of items that are antique, collectibles, or can otherwise become a conversation piece. If an item has a history, it's automatically worth more money.

Don't be afraid to talk to people who stop at your space to browse. From a shopper's point of view, one of the great delights of flea markets is the conversation. People are attracted to dealers who are storytellers, loaded with fascinating information about the items they have for sale. And be a conspirator. If your customer has gotten a great bargain, let them know.

Setting up a canopy will not only give your space a professional store-like appearance, it will also give you protection from the hot sun or rain. After setting up your tables arrange your wares and display merchandise in an organized manner. Remember, a junked-up messy area can take away from the value of some items. It can also cause people to start tripping all over the place.

To BE CONTINUED Keep visiting . . .

Garage Sale on CafePress 

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eBay has also some garage sales you can take a look at. Who Knows you may find great jumble sales there.

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Garage Sale on Videos from Youtube 

These are video shots I have taken to garage sales, jumble sales, or moving sales and uploaded to Youtube.

Jumble Sale! Loppemarked!

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Saturdays Markets in Silkeborg, Denmark

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Che Guevara in Aarhus Festival

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