I'm not going to bother with a full review because it's not worth my time or yours. I have instead created a list of some of the worst advice from the book:
- The author says you should go out even as it's raining as rain means there will be fewer people out saling. It also means there will be fewer sales; in my experience none at all.
- The author proposes this ridiculous method of finding sales that involves the classified section of the local newspaper(s), a map, and some other voodoo. She plots out all of the "good-sounding" sales within a 40 mile radius of her home and then uses the map to find a driving route between them. She doesn't have a set route and thus claims that driving "200 to 500 miles on a Saturday morning" is not out of the ordinary.
- She claims estate sales should be your most desired sales. That's true if all you want is antiques but for people who don't want overpriced furniture estate sales are at the bottom of the list. You rarely find anything besides overpriced housewares at estate sales.
- The author says that to find information about garage sales in a city you should "call the chamber of commerce." Because you know, the chamber of commerce is dedicated to organizing individuals' garage sales.
- She says you should drive by houses at night to find where they are so you don't get lost in the morning. I guess if you have the money to drive 400 miles just for garage saling you have the money to go ahead and do it twice.
- The author actively discourages you from leaving your set route if you see signs for sales not advertised in the newspaper. I guess she's in such a hurry to get to her garage sales she can't stop at other garage sales.
- My biggest complaint about this book is the suggested bargaining technique. All you're supposed to do is ask "is that your best price." Nothing says "I'm an amateur" more than that phrase.
There's a bunch more garbage in this book that I'm not even going to cover. She did stumble on some good ideas by accident in a few places:
- Haggle on everything. It saves you money and gives you practice.
- Mention flaws in an item to bring the price down.
- Size up a seller before you bargain to try to determine what bargaining techniques will work on him or her.
- Bundle (or "group" as the author calls it) items for extra discounts.
- Play dumb and ask questions about an item to both bring the price down and not let the seller know you're in the resale market.
- If you see an item you want, grab it before someone else and carry it with you.
This book is definitely geared more for people wanting to get into antiques and sell professionally in consignment shops and auctions. I was hoping for some good tips regarding resource guides (like pricing guides, etc) and reselling but the information was so general it's useless. I'm glad I didn't pay money for this book.
I think I'm going to keep looking for an actual good guide to garage saling but I don't have much help. I think all of the written guides are written by and for the dumb people who actually think they can consistently make enough money to be rich.
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