Send me to the grocery store for milk, eggs, and bread without a list and I’m in trouble. You’d better be near a phone so I can call and ask, “what was I supposed to get?”
Yet, if I walk into a booth at a flea market and see something good that I either saw a picture of, or read about, 10 years ago, a small voice in my head starts talking to me. Much of the time, I don’t know what it’s worth. I may not even know what it is. But I hear the voice, and when I do, I’ve learned to at least slow down and pay some serious attention to what I’m looking at.
Sometimes the voice is wrong. Sometimes I choose not to listen to it. But, over the years, I’ve learned that the voice knows what it’s talking about the majority of the time.
It doesn’t matter whether you look for things to sell on eBay at flea markets, antique malls, auction sales, thrift shops, book sales, garage sales, etc., having your own little voice traveling with you can make you a lot of money over time.
If you already have a little voice of your own, you know what I mean. If you don’t, here’s how to go about developing one of your own.
I indirectly touched on this briefly a short time ago in Knowing It When You See It when I said:
“The key to finding valuable eBay merchandise at thrift stores, garage sales, flea markets, auctions, or antique shops is having an “edge” by knowing a little bit more than most people about a lot of things. Much of that edge can be gained by spending an hour or two a week doing research on the Net and either bookmarking useful sites you find, or adding them to your RSS reader.“
“Knowing a little bit more than most people about a lot of things” doesn’t mean you need to become an expert on everything you might buy. All you need to do is expose yourself to information about a wide variety of things. From there, your brain and your little voice take over. The more information you expose yourself to, the more frequently you will hear your little voice and the more insistent it will become when it does.
Where do you find the information to expose your voice to? Right here on the Net. The Net is filled with “voice food”. All you need to do is take an hour or two each month to find it. Here’s a couple of examples:
Old typewriters often show up at antique shops/malls, flea markets, and auction sales. Some are worth a lot of money, most are worth very little. Most people selling one think if it’s old it’s valuable, but have no idea what individual brands and models are worth in relation to others.
If you do a search on Google for typewriter related keyword phrases one of the sites you would find is ETCetera - The Journal Of The Early Typewriter Collector Association. This is a quarterly publication with a subscription cost of $30 a year. Most of us probably don’t have enough interest in old typewriters to spend $30 for a subscription but, at the bottom of the page we find that the first forty-nine issues of this publication are available free in PDF format to be either read on-line or downloaded to your computer.
There is tons of valuable information in these forty-nine issues and you wouldn’t even have to read them if you didn’t want to. Just exposing yourself to the illustrations of the rare machines is enough to give your little voice something to talk about if you come across one of them months or years from now.
Another example of a similar tightly niched site full of information is Coxrail.com which is devoted to North American railroad stocks and bonds. Again, probably not a subject you want to spend weeks learning about. However, their archive of seven plus years of newsletters in PDF format is filled with “little voice food”.
Now lets look at BookRide the blog mentioned in the article quoted earlier. BookRide is filled with information about valuable books, nearly all of which would bring three or four figures or more on eBay or Amazon. Many of these books were published in the last 20-30 years and could possibly show up at book sales, estate sales, or, occasionally, even a garage sale.
Once again, most of people won’t invest the time to read the entire blog and try to retain all the information it contains. But when you are developing your own little voice, there’s no need to. Concentrate on just the books published in the last 20 or 30 years. Nearly all of these include a picture of the book. Simply download the pictures to a file you set up on your computer. Then, when you plan on going to a FOL or an AAUW book sale, spend a half-hour, or an hour, looking at the pictures on your computer. You will be surprised how much fodder that will give your little voice.
Better yet, save the photos to a Microsoft Word or some other word document, print them out, and put them in a looseleaf notebook. Then when you’re going somewhere you know you will probably have to wait for a while such as a doctors appointment, bring the notebook with and spend time looking at the pictures while in the waiting room.
There are literally thousands of this kind of “little voice food” sites on the Net. All you need to do is pick one or two things you want to learn about and spend a little time digging around in Google or your favorite search engine. Spending only an hour or two a week doing this will, over time, keep that little voice in your head busy and put thousands of dollars in your pocket.
Who knows? You may find yourself needing a list when going to the grocery store for three items also.
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March 12th, 2007 at 11:40 am
Gary,
Great points…my “voices” are getting more frequent and more insistent, I just hope they don’t start telling me to do crazy things like the guy in the Amityville Horror story!!
LOL!!
I’d like to add another method I personally use to help me “burn images” of specific items that are on my own “look for list”.
In addition to the loose-leaf binder that you recommend, I also use free software called “WebShots” which is very cool. This WebShots software allows me to load Bitmap, Gif or JPEG images into folders on my computer’s hard drive and then I run the images in a slide show format as my computer monitor’s screen saver!
That way when my computer is on, but idle, image after image is flashed for 3 seconds on my screen! I have literally hundreds of images I’ve downloaded from eBay and all over the Internet into the WebShots folders.
What’s really cool is that everybody in the family sees them too, so they can be spotters as well. Just recently my son and daughter found a 1st edition copy of the Golden Book
“Pokey Puppy” with its original dust jacket, and my wife found a copy of Vincent Prices’
“Treasury Cookbook” at a recent book sale. All three said they remembered them from the pictures on my computer!!
My 8 year old daughter ran over to me at the sale holding the book with the world’s biggest smile on her face and said, “Daddy, Daddy me and Stevie found this Pokey Puppy book just like the one on your computer” She was SOOO proud, and I must admit I was pretty proud too!!
If any over your readers would like to check out WebShots I’ve included the link below.
http://www.webshots.com/
Much Success Everybody!!
March 12th, 2007 at 3:28 pm
Stephen,
That’s something I had never thought of. I’m going to give it a try. Thanks for the tip.
Gary