Get rid of some of this stuff
Things with stories are more valuable than things.
Many moons ago, I made a little extra cash by selling items on ebay. At the time I figured something out: if the item I am selling uses a standard description, like the boilerplate copy from the items website, it sells near the average "sold" price. However, if the item has a story attached, bidders tend to pay more.
I discovered this when selling a scraping tool. I bought it to power scrape my house in a fit of handyness. It was a German tool, not easy to find in the US, and it worked like a charm. I paid $350 for it, hooked it up one Saturday morning, scraped a 6x6 section of my house in about an hour, did some quick math, and put the thing back in the box. There's no way I'm going to finish it, I thought. My neighbor saw me working and asked if he could use it. A week later, he had a perfectly stripped house.
When I put it on ebay, I told a long, drawn out story about my dreams, my reality, and my proof that it works as advertised. What did it sell for? $350.
I repeated the exercise a few times, most recently with iphones, an old bicycle, and my last laptop. Each time, the items sell for a higher average price than similarly listed items.
So tell a story. It's not just an old Nike 9-iron. That's only worth $40. It was used by Tiger Woods, daily, on his practice tee outside his home in Floriday. It's been touched by greatness. That's worth $80. But wait, not only did Tiger use it, it's rumored that his wife at the time, Elin, used it too. She embedded it in his car as he tried to drive out of his house. That explains the kink in the hozel. How much will you pay for that Nike 9-iron?
Use stories to sell your stuff.
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