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In article , Mike Coslo writes:
I've had good luck at hamfests by: - Marking "asking" price on items so people have an idea what I think it's worth. - Marking "firm" if the price is not negotiable - Offering stuff I just want to move as "name your price" or "make offer" That's the way to do it! Somehow I suspect you don't hate the customer either, eh? Exactly. I'll even carry stuff to people's cars. Of course eBay and the 'net have had a big effect on 'fests. We've essentially got a worldwide 24/7 hamfest going on, either as an auction or outright sale. Plus you can toss out "wanted to buy" posts. Only downside is you're dealing at a distance and the whole packing/shipping/payment/insurance headache. And getting robbed one way or the other. I don't know what you mean, Mike. In seven years of online buying and selling I've *never* had a real problem. Not on eBay, not on the reflectors or newsgroups. Why folks expect to get eBay prices at a hamfest is beyond me, though. If you want eBay prices, go to eBay. The bloom is fading from that rose anyway. I did a quick perusal of ham related equipment, and the prices seemed quite similar to what I would expect to pay at a flea. There will always be the occasional outrageous selling price, either on the high or low end, but it looks as if sanity may be coming home in Ebay. Some forces are at work the - eBay hit big back when the economy was booming and people had lots of confidence in their financial futures. It wasn't that long ago that "retire at 55" was a catchphrase - and if the markets had kept climbing, it would have been reality for a lot of folks. But since boom-dot-bust hit, there are a lot more sellers and fewer price-no-object buyers - eBay was a new phenomenon back then, too. Equivalent to a 24/7 hamfest. I saw things for sale on eBay that I'd never seen in 37 years of hamming, like the famous-but-overrated-in-my-opinion SX-88. Such a new environment is a perfect setting to make things appear rarer than they really are, and prices followed. Now, people have learned that if something was on eBay once, it's a very good bet that sooner or later another one will show up. - The inital impact of eBay was to raise a lot of expectations about price. The first SX-88 I ever saw on ebay went for over $6,000, and the bidding was furious. I'm sure a lot of folks saw that auction and went away with the thought "an SX-88 is worth $6000" But less than two weeks later, a second SX-88 showed up and went for less than $4000. People remember the high price but forget the low ones. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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