What strategies have worked best for you in finding profitable books?
When it comes to estate sales, I have changed the rankings for the books I buy from when I started. When I started, it was about 7 million and now I only go to about 5 million, and I might even lower that. Also, a big thing I learned is it is OK to pass on a book—just because ScoutIQ says it's a buy does not always make it so. For example, if Amazon is also on that book for $16.95, then just put it back on the shelf. I also hit as many sales as I can. The more sales mean more opportunity.
How do you stay efficient with listing and shipping books?
Honestly, I am a work in progress in this area. I have a prep center which has been a huge help. Almost all the books I buy online go right to the prep center, so I can concentrate on my estate sale books. I try to get my estate sale listings done over the weekend and dropped off Monday morning. I have to set aside time to change prices and my repricer.
What advice would you give to someone just starting out who feels overwhelmed?
It's important that you learn from your wins and losses. Set reasonable goals. When a book sells, go back and look and see why it sold. Was it a good rank? Was it priced right? Did you make money? If it sells fast and you made money, see if more copies are available at a good price and it can be a good replen. Most importantly, it is not a race. You will find books that make you a lot of money, like $50 or $60, which is great! But those are fewer and far between. Be excited, but don't lose focus. It's just as exciting to buy a book for $1.00 and sell it for $20 or $25 and make $5.00 or $6.00. Also, you will make mistakes—we all do—but when reviewing a loss, just figure out why it failed. Was it a good book, but you paid too much? Was it just a bad book? Did it get over-saturated after you purchased? Whatever it is, learn from it.