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                How To Make Money With Garage Sales  | 
             
            
              by: 
                Marilyn Pokorney  | 
             
            
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 remains unchanged and you include the copyright and author
 information (Resource Box) at the end.   You may not use
 this article in any unsolicited commercial email (spam).
 
 You may retrieve this article by:
 Autoresponder:  garagesale@getresponse.com
 Website: http://www.apluswriting.net/articles/garage.txt
 
 Words:  680 including resource box
 Copyright: 2004 Marilyn Pokorney
 
 Please leave the resource box intact with an active link,
 and send a courtesy copy of the publication in which the
 article appears to: marilynp@nctc.net
 ------------------------------------------------------------
 How To Make Money With Garage Sales
 
 Drive through almost any neighborhood in any city or town on
 a weekend, and you're sure to see garage sales scattered
 throughout.
 
 These homeowners are spending their weekend time off making
 money.   The average profit is $600 for a one-weekend garage
 sale.
 
 It's time to get your share of the pie.  Organization is the
 key.
 
 Step one:  Check with the local officials to see what the
 local laws and regulations are on operating garage sales in
 your area.
 
 Step two:  Spend a few weekends  going to garage sales in
 your area.  See what is selling, what people are buying, how
 the items are priced, how the sellers advertise.  Observe
 how the sellers display their items.  Take notes.
 
 Step three:  Clean house and take stock of what you have and
 what it's time to get rid of.  Be sure to pick out at least
 one interesting and unusual item to call
 attention to your sale;  some large ticket item you can set
 up  in front of your home during your sale.
 
 If you find older items such as dishes, a painting, an old
 flower urn etc. that you feel it's time to dispose of have
 it appraised.  You don't want to sell something for 50 cents
 only to  find out later it was an antique valued at $500.00.
 You can be sure there are garage sale shoppers who are on
 the lookout for just this kind of treasure.
 
 Step four:  Pick a date for your sale.  The best time to
 have a garage sale is twice a year in May or September.
 People will be out shopping for summer items in May and
 winter items in September.
 
 Never pick a holiday weekend such as Mother's Day or Labor
 Day.  Holiday festivities will get the attention of most
 people.
 
 The best days for your garage sale are Thursday, Friday, and
 Saturday.
 
 Step five:  Advertise, advertise and advertise some more.
 Place ads in the local newspaper, shopper guides, on
 bulletin boards and even online.  Place signs all over the
 neighborhood with brightly colored letters, attached
 balloons, etc.
 
 Step six:  Organize your sale.  Put price stickers on your
 items.  Have a wide variety of clothing and jewelry and
 arrange them in a rainbow of colors.  Make sure jewelry and
 appliances sparkle!  Hang clothing on racks arranged in
 sizes.  Imagine that you are opening a retail store and copy
 what the stores do.
 
 If you have items that are hard to price and you think they
 will not sell, put them in a penny box.  And be sure to mark
 the box "Penny Box" or "All items just 1 cent each".
 
 Step seven:  Timing.  Consider starting at 7:00 a.m. instead
 of 8:00 or 9:00.  And close no later than 6:00 p.m.  And
 positively NEVER shut down for the noon hour!  There are
 people who work on weekends and will stop on their way to or
 from work and shop during their lunch breaks.
 
 As most customers will have come and gone by 1:00, noon hour
 being the most active,  you can start lowering prices after
 1:00 p.m.  On items you think will not sell at all, put them
 in a box marked "Free".
 
 And lastly, what doesn't sell take to the local Good Will or
 other organization of your choice.
 
 More information available at
 http://www.apluswriting.net/garage/garage.htm
  
  
 About the author: 
 
  Author: Marilyn Pokorney  Freelance writer of science, nature, animals and the  environment.  Also loves crafts, gardening, and reading.  Website: http://www.apluswriting.net 
   
   
  Circulated by Article Emporium
   
   
  
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