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Posts Tagged ‘consignment’

I received this email from a concerned supplier this week:HowToConsign.com teaches consumers how to Turn Their Cluttered Closets into Cash!

What do you think of a consignment shop that was giving you 50% of the sale price and then all of a sudden, you go there and now they are only buying outright and giving you only 25 to 40% of the estimated sale price. Just wondering. I was consigning there but decided not to anymore. Would like to hear what you think of this.

How would you answer this consumer? Here’s what I said as representative of the 160+ Sponsor Shops of HowToConsign.com. See what you think.

I’d say that’s a great deal… if you understand it!

When you say you were getting 50% of the sale price… you were getting that only if the item sold.
And you were getting 50% of what the item sold for, which might be less than first established.
So you were sharing the risk of the item never selling (you get zero, of course) or of the item selling at a reduced price.

With buying outright, the shop assumes all the risk of the item not ever selling, or of having to reduce the price and their getting less than they evaluated your item at.

For example, let’s say you want to get rid of a coat. You take it to the shop, which evaluates/ estimates the coat is worth $50.
You consign it; it sells; you make $25.
Or maybe it never sells, you get nothing.
Or maybe the shop has to mark it down to $40 or $30… you get less, say $20 or $15… and only after it sells, of course, which might be weeks or even months later.

Take the same coat in and offer it for sale outright. The shopkeeper evaluates it at the same $50. You get $12.50- $20, cash in hand today. The shopkeeper assumes all risk of a markdown or it never selling… so, if the coat sells, eventually, for $30 and the shopkeeper invested her $20 in it, she’s made $10 and in the meanwhile, she’s used up space in her shop and not had the $20 she gave you, to invest in more merchandise to sell. But you have your money, without any worry on your part.

Some folks like cash in hand today, others don’t mind waiting and sharing the risk of whether and for how much it will sell. It’s a matter of preference. If you don’t care for the buy-outright way, you shouldn’t feel guilty about switching to another shop’s consignment services.

Many thanks for the excellent question, and congratulations on recycling your no-longer-loved possessions!

Would you have explained this differently?

Tell us how….

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Of course, to have petty cash... you need to know How to Make More MoneyIt amazes me that some consignment, resale, and thrift shops don’t manage small expenditures with a

petty cash fund.

It’s by far the easiest way to do so. Here’s how:

Establish A Petty Cash Fund
Designate an individual and a backup person as custodian of the fund. In this case “many hands do not make light work” . This fund is used for minor and unanticipated expenses where a check can’t be written or the amount is so small that you don’t want to write a check. Some examples include buying pizza for the staff, postage stamps, minor office supplies, paper towels, and cleaning supplies. A pre-numbered voucher or ticket should be filled out and approved for each expenditure. When the balance in the fund becomes low a check from your regular bank account should be issued and cashed to replenish the fund and the expenses recorded in your accounting records. Surprise counts of petty cash should occasionally be done to make sure that employees are not “borrowing” from this source of cash. Counting the fund is very easy. The total amount of the tickets and the cash on hand should equal to the fund’s established balance.

from The Bean Counter

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Lots of things to consign, sell, or donate: how would your shop handle it?When someone

asks you a question,

what’s your answer? (more…)

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It’s Time to Ask for NWTs!

Consignment and resale shoprs love NWT as holiday giftsIt’s time to get your suppliers, whether you’re consignment, buy-outright, or donations-only, to sort through their unused, “new-with-tags” (NWT in eBay-speak) and bring them in. That way, you’ll have a.

good selection of items to sell as gifts to those shoppers

who are leery of buying recycled items for holiday gifts. And who knows? You may even end up developing a whole new category of merchandise in your shop!

Remind them:

  • On your intake receipts message line
  • In your monthly/ bimonthly consignor letter distributed with checks or when they pick up payments
  • As a separate, card-stock quarter-page “Reminder: Now’s the PERFECT season for…”
  • On your after-hours phone message
  • On social media
  • By broadcast email, postcard, phone calls

And don’t forget those customers who don’t normally bring items in.

A bag-stuffer, in-store signage, and of course good old conversation: If you’ve always wondered how you could turn unused items into cash, now’s a great time. For the holidays, new-with-tags sells really well for gift buying. That blouse that you never got around to returning, or the handbag Cousin Millie Of The Big Hair sent you for your birthday? Bring them in, and walk out with something you like a whole lot better.

With a good selection of these brand-new items, imagine the holiday gift swing shop displays you can have! Your clientele may surprise you: one year I received over 250 pieces of brand-new intimate apparel, things consignors had just assumed I wouldn’t take until I made a point of asking for NWTs. Brand-new Wundervoll undies and Myla Angelica teddies? LaPerla bras? What’s not to covet?Save

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Are you running your consignment shop like a conqueror?Is the first thing you think of, when people won’t do what you want them to do, to make a new rule they must obey in order to patronize your business?

If so you have a Napoleon complex.

You know: Submit (more…)

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