&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Feb 04 2009

How to make money at a consignment shop

Published by atlfreestyle at 8:25 am under Work at home Edit This

I have dove deep into my creative bank this past week.  I have had to find some more ways to make real cash.  I started surfing the Internet and was successful.  I did a search in my city of consignment shops.  To my surprise I found a few.  I started calling and asking their policies.  I found 2 that actually pay you cash on the spot for your items!  This was awesome.  I have been into the shop a few times to sell stuff.  I found that they do not want junk.  The items have to be in good to great condition.  They may not pay top dollar, but they do pay dollars.  If I have no need for the item, and I got my use out of it, then to me it is all profit.  It is all in how you look at the situation.  A few people I know are like, “they bought that from you for too cheap”.  But I didn’t think so.  I was pleased to walk out of there with any amount of cash.  Consignment shops are great alternatives to Ebay and Craigslist. I really depends on how you want to spend your time. Going to the consignment shop will cost you time and gas. Craigslist will only cost you a few minutes of your time. Ebay will cost you time and shipping costs are incurred, but you have a worldwide market. It really all depends on what you choose to do with your time. Of these 3 ways you can make money at home. Also check out the FREE section on Craigslist.

Free Snack Mix http://www.bearnaked.com/postcards/sample.asp

Free Deodrant (in Spanish) http://www.univision.com/contentroot/uol/10portada/content/jhtml/plb/NOMETA_plb_degree.jhtml

Free Pads http://www.beinggirl.com/en_US/sampling_teen.jsp?sourcetyp

photo1.jpg

Possibly-related Articles:                                        (auto-generated)
Advertise Here with Today.com

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

Advertise Here
Some Today.com contributors may have received a fee or a promotional product or service from a manufacturer for promotional consideration, while others receive no consideration at all. Each contributor is responsible for disclosing any such promotional consideration.