My suggestion.
Do your recent sales search. eBay offers sold prices. It's the easiest and fastest way. Be wary of the item that sells for much higher than the rest. It's an anomaly. You want your pricing to land in the middle.
If you can't find your item. Check the sold tab on hifishark. Expanding the radius to world wide. Sometimes items weren't released in All countries. Audiogon has a blue book you can pay to access sales data.
Don't try to sell as a system. Much harder to find 1 person that wants the whole system than someone who is looking to buy a single piece. And as a rule, you generally get less $ when selling as a lot.
Shine it up. If it's old, maybe the yellow haze of nicotine covers it
good pictures not like the ones I take. Ugh
power it up when taking pictures so you can show all lights work.
The big selling sites(like the one we are on now) is a great start. You can at the same time list it locally on C/L or Offerup or any numerous others.
Local listings will often yield a lower sale price.
After researching recent sales of a particular item, I will deduct the fees and shipping I wouldve paid to sell nationally and maybe an extra 10% for lack of packing shipping hassle
national listing site $200 sale price. Local C/L $150 sale price but you will find that most want it for $20 no matter what it is
a video posted on YouTube of the the item working and demonstrating functions is a huge help and a bit of CYA when it come to the scammers.
You can also try to trade it locally for an item of equal value that you would either like to keep or might be easier to sell and get the funds you need.
These are are all options for your audio selling. The more you do the better your chances of higher sale price or at least a quicker sale over a similar item
Do your recent sales search. eBay offers sold prices. It's the easiest and fastest way. Be wary of the item that sells for much higher than the rest. It's an anomaly. You want your pricing to land in the middle.
If you can't find your item. Check the sold tab on hifishark. Expanding the radius to world wide. Sometimes items weren't released in All countries. Audiogon has a blue book you can pay to access sales data.
Don't try to sell as a system. Much harder to find 1 person that wants the whole system than someone who is looking to buy a single piece. And as a rule, you generally get less $ when selling as a lot.
Shine it up. If it's old, maybe the yellow haze of nicotine covers it
good pictures not like the ones I take. Ugh
power it up when taking pictures so you can show all lights work.
The big selling sites(like the one we are on now) is a great start. You can at the same time list it locally on C/L or Offerup or any numerous others.
Local listings will often yield a lower sale price.
After researching recent sales of a particular item, I will deduct the fees and shipping I wouldve paid to sell nationally and maybe an extra 10% for lack of packing shipping hassle
national listing site $200 sale price. Local C/L $150 sale price but you will find that most want it for $20 no matter what it is
a video posted on YouTube of the the item working and demonstrating functions is a huge help and a bit of CYA when it come to the scammers.
You can also try to trade it locally for an item of equal value that you would either like to keep or might be easier to sell and get the funds you need.
These are are all options for your audio selling. The more you do the better your chances of higher sale price or at least a quicker sale over a similar item