 |
Auction
Selling Secrets
Get
Free Shipping Supplies
The United States Post Office is still 'pushing' their Priority Mail
services. You can order all the shipping supplies you want through the
USPS - order in minutes on line - and have them delivered to your door.
When you make your first order, the USPS will mail you a postcard to sign
and mail back to them. The 'payment' for this deal is simply agreeing
to (and signing to prove it) use these supplies only for their intended
purpose. Anyone caught turning Priority Mail boxes inside out to use a
cheaper mail service will be in big trouble. We haven't done this so we
don't know if you get a large fine, jail time, or just lose the privilege
to ever receive any more supplies. So, this is not for you if you prefer
to send your packages by UPS or using the Book Rate.
Just what kind of supplies does the USPS offer? Small boxes, larger boxes,
flat boxes, larger flat boxes, small flat boxes, flat mailers, 'Priority
Mail' tape, and labels. You can't have it all, you have to buy your own
bubblewrap! The only real catch is that you must order the minimum, which
can be a case of boxes. Since the boxes come flat, this is not as bad
as it sounds.
For those that don't want to use Priority Mail or the USPS in general,
there are still places to get boxes for free.
- Your local supermarket gets deliveries at least once a week. Just
ask one of their employees on what day and at what time their deliveries
arrive. They won't usually save boxes for you, but you can walk in and
get as many as you like before they cut them down for recycling.
- Office Depot has great boxes for larger items. They receive their
reams of paper in sturdy boxes with lids, and these are always clean.
Our local Office Depot receives paper deliveries twice a week. The store
manager even agreed to hold the boxes for a few hours. We just need
to go in on the correct day. Since these are such handy boxes, you may
have to be the first to get to the store to beat others with the same
idea.
- Check the free ads in the Recycler. Companies go out of business all
the time, and they would usually prefer to give their supply of boxes
away than to pay someone to haul them away. We found a vitamin store
that was closing down and got hundreds of small and tiny boxes. These
are not only great for mailing small items, but they are perfect for
double boxing a set of smaller breakables.
- Liquor stores have the sturdiest boxes since bottles of liquor and
wine are so heavy. If you sell bottles, these may even come with cardboard
slots in them already to keep bottles from hitting each other when you
send out several to one buyer.
- Dumpsters behind stores sometimes have good empty boxes. Sometimes
you are lucky enough to find the boxes piled outside the dumpster. Either
way, you should check them to be sure that they are clean and dry (a
box will be weakened forever once it gets wet).
- Get inventive, you may find even more good suppliers of boxes.
|
|
|
|

Cool
Auction Tip
You should always make sure that you know exactly
what you're bidding on. Before you bid, you can email the seller
if the information he or she has posted isn't entirely clear. Some
sellers might even include their home phone numbers. Also, check
the reputation of the seller. After each seller's name is a seller
rating in parentheses. Click on that to see the seller's scorecard,
including links to comments about the seller. Of course, it wouldn't
be too hard to re-register with an auction under an assumed name
if you acquired a very poor seller rating.
|
|
|