Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Getting ready for garage sale season takes planning

Darpan News Desk, 01 May, 2018 04:05 PM
    Now that winter is behind us and warmer weather is finally on its way, we’re entering one of the best times of the year in Canada — garage sale season.
     
    After being cooped up through the long, cold winter with basements and garages packed with stuff, many Canadians are eager to do a little spring cleaning and make a few dollars at the same time by selling furniture, clothes and other items cluttering up the house that are still too good to go to the dump.
     
    “Garage sales are a great way to recycle and reuse items by giving them a new life in a new home,” says JUSTJUNK President Mike Thorne. “They’re also great entertainment for treasure hunters looking to find antiques and other items that have been buried away for years in an attic or a storage room under the stairs.”
     
    But organizing a garage sale isn’t as simple as hauling all your stuff to the end of the driveway. JUSTJUNK offers the following tips to make sure your garage sale is a hit:
     
    1. Advertise Early and Clearly
    Getting a buzz around your garage sale is important. You can’t just put up a sign and hope for the best, not when there are tons of free tools to help. Posting online, on Facebook in local buy/sell groups or in local newspaper classifieds early can help build buzz. Find out if neighbours are having garage sales and try to time everything together so you can appeal to the biggest audience. A small amount of quick planning can get more people interested and out. Are you selling something special or large? Old appliance need to go? Let people know beforehand what you’re selling and they might even make the special trip. 
     
    2. Be Organized and Priced Properly
    It’s one thing to lay everything out, set tables up and put signs on grouped items, but if they’re in a mishmash of piles, unorganized and forcing your customers to absent-mindedly flip through them their interest will wane. Put the most popular stuff first in your piles, drawing attention and make sure the pricing is proper. Price according to the goal of the garage sale. Is this downsizing? Do you just need to clear stuff out? Then you’ll be more successful pricing at points where people feel they’re getting a deal. If you want to make money, then highlight the value of the items you have for sale. However, a garage sale might be less appropriate. Try selling on-line through those Facebook groups if it’s something you think might have value but you don’t want anymore. 
     
    3. If it’s broken, don’t sell it. 
    You can always put a discount on something with some minor cosmetic or exterior damage, as long as it still works. If you’re not sure if it’s broken, or if that book has all its pages, then put that in a second pile (we’ll get to that pile in Tip 5). 
     
    4. Don't be afraid to get creative
    People are going to haggle. It’s a garage sale. Unless you’re firm about the price, be willing to see a deal when it’s in front of you. After all, if your goal is to get rid of stuff, then you’re more free to be creative with 2-for-1s, group bargains and more on-the-spot deals. Would you budge on the price of a large TV stand, if someone offered to pick it up themselves? Would they be willing to pay a little more to have you deliver it? Expect some unexpected questions and be flexible.
     
    5. Know You Won’t Sell Out
    You’re not likely going to get rid of everything in your garage sale. Foresight like this can help. Remember that book that you have? That old copy of “A Tale of Two Cities” that is missing the pages about one of those cities can be put into the pile that you know you’ll have to get rid of some other way. A removal company can help by picking up everything and sorting through the garage sale leftovers, donating things that can be donated and used again, recycling that which can be recycled and more. But think ahead. Create those piles early so that you can be a little less surprised about how much is left behind. 
     

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Dictionary.com chooses 'complicit' as its word of the year

    Dictionary.com chooses 'complicit' as its word of the year
    The site chooses its word of the year by heading straight for data first, scouring look-ups by day, month and year to date and how they correspond to noteworthy events

    Dictionary.com chooses 'complicit' as its word of the year

    Black Friday Enthusiasm Wanes As Some Consumers, Retailers Shun Practice

    Black Friday Enthusiasm Wanes As Some Consumers, Retailers Shun Practice
    Chaotic images of people clamouring to be the first through the doors to get their hands on hot deals have become synonymous with Black Friday in recent years.

    Black Friday Enthusiasm Wanes As Some Consumers, Retailers Shun Practice

    Canada Post Says Santa Won't Write Individual Letters To School Kids - Here's Why

    Canada Post Says Santa Won't Write Individual Letters To School Kids - Here's Why
    Canada Post says Santa won't be sending as many personalized letters to kids this year, though he still wants to make sure he responds to every note he receives.

    Canada Post Says Santa Won't Write Individual Letters To School Kids - Here's Why

    Dressing Ethics For A Job Interview

    Dressing Ethics For A Job Interview
    Dress in a manner that is professionally appropriate to the position for which you are applying. Avoid loud colours and make sure you iron your clothes before going for an interview, suggest experts.

    Dressing Ethics For A Job Interview

    Hauser & Wirth Publishers Pop-up Bookshop at Holt Renfrew

    Hauser & Wirth Publishers Pop-up Bookshop at Holt Renfrew
    The Hauser & Wirth Publishers pop-up bookshop offers dozens of titles that speak to the gallery’s quartercentury history of exhibitions, projects, and research.

    Hauser & Wirth Publishers Pop-up Bookshop at Holt Renfrew

    Human Pilot Beats Artificial Intelligence In NASA's Drone Race

    Human Pilot Beats Artificial Intelligence In NASA's Drone Race
    Timing laps through a twisting obstacle course, they raced drones controlled by AI against world-class drone pilot Ken Loo.

    Human Pilot Beats Artificial Intelligence In NASA's Drone Race