Earning extra money what do you guys do
#1
Earning extra money what do you guys do
Apart from your full time job does any one do something park time to help with the money.
Anyone run a webshop / ebay any good?
Delivery driver?
Any ideas would be great.
Thanks
Anyone run a webshop / ebay any good?
Delivery driver?
Any ideas would be great.
Thanks
#4
Scooby Senior
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: 52 Festive Road
Posts: 28,311
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
#7
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: under the bonnet
Posts: 935
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Ill give you a serious answer lol.
Ebay is a waste of time. The fees are silly.
I do gardening at the weekends. It pays for my fuel for the week so can't complain.
Ebay is a waste of time. The fees are silly.
I do gardening at the weekends. It pays for my fuel for the week so can't complain.
Trending Topics
#8
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Home
Posts: 14,758
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
#11
Scooby Regular
I install TV's and AV equipment for people who are too up themselves to read the manuals.
£45 for the first hour plus 2 devices, £15 every additional hour plus travel expenses depending on where the customer is situated. Its a good earner but i don't do half as many as I should because I vet the intelligence of my customers carefully to see if the hassle is worth the actual cash.
I'm also going to start supplying my own cables soon for extra cash.
£45 for the first hour plus 2 devices, £15 every additional hour plus travel expenses depending on where the customer is situated. Its a good earner but i don't do half as many as I should because I vet the intelligence of my customers carefully to see if the hassle is worth the actual cash.
I'm also going to start supplying my own cables soon for extra cash.
#13
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (10)
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Bristol
Posts: 1,391
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I muck around with peoples games consoles.
I repair xbox 360s, chip/mod them, i mod Nintendo Wii's and also turn original xboxs into media centres so you can watch movies/listen to music from your computer on your tv.
I used to buy broken xbox 360s, fix them and sell them on ebay but its really hard to make any money on ebay due to their excessive fees. They take 10% final value fee and you have to accept paypal now which ebay own and take a further 3%. Cheekily they take both fees as a percentage of the total sale not one then the other. And there is a listing fee too!
I repair xbox 360s, chip/mod them, i mod Nintendo Wii's and also turn original xboxs into media centres so you can watch movies/listen to music from your computer on your tv.
I used to buy broken xbox 360s, fix them and sell them on ebay but its really hard to make any money on ebay due to their excessive fees. They take 10% final value fee and you have to accept paypal now which ebay own and take a further 3%. Cheekily they take both fees as a percentage of the total sale not one then the other. And there is a listing fee too!
#15
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: A big town with sh1t shops: Northampton
Posts: 21,366
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I make a sell fabric hand bags and iphone covers. No, really. I have a shop on a site called Folksy which is all hand made stuff - some of which is very professional, some not
The fees are not too harsh, 20p listing and 5% of sale value. I am happy with that as I am only selling things for about £15-20 each. The phone covers are £4.50 and cost quite a little to make. I also sell to work colleagues and friends.
I know not everyone is as creative as me, but there's always something. The thing I sometimes do too is to trawl the charity shops for good branded clothing and bung it on Ebay. I found a French Connection pure silk dress for £7 in a second hand shop and sold it for £35 on ebay.
The fees are not too harsh, 20p listing and 5% of sale value. I am happy with that as I am only selling things for about £15-20 each. The phone covers are £4.50 and cost quite a little to make. I also sell to work colleagues and friends.
I know not everyone is as creative as me, but there's always something. The thing I sometimes do too is to trawl the charity shops for good branded clothing and bung it on Ebay. I found a French Connection pure silk dress for £7 in a second hand shop and sold it for £35 on ebay.
#23
Scooby Regular
Would you not consider a webshop?
It's hard because most things you can think of are already on the web.
Ebay is just a straight forward con. I've sold quite a bit of RC and train stuff on there and I've been royally stiffed by the fees. I've also had to pander to idiot buyers who don't read descriptions properly because they can claim a chargeback and keep the goods and get a refund.
I wanted to sell Zippo lighters but ebay fees meant that at best I'd make £2 on each one - rather than £4 or £5 if the fees were acceptable.
I looked at webshops but decided not to bother in the end because theres a number of well established shops for lighters already.
I think these days, unless you have a successful real world shop that can help absorb start up costs of an online shop, unless your immensely lucky, it just won't happen.
I've bought and sold a few old RC cars on ebay and made a few pounds. Mostly I just do it to rebuild them as it's hit and miss whether I make or lose on each car. Again Ebay fairly ruins any chance of making more.
Our postie cuts the grass but he's started to take a pi55. Every week at £10 a go is too expensive and we are going to have to tell him to stop.
Last edited by EddScott; 09 May 2011 at 11:42 AM.
#25
Not enough people like you around.
I always had my paper-hanging shears sharpened until the guy who did it retired.
Found someone else who did it but they came back en-even - not good for cutting £100 a roll papers!
Now I just have to buy crappy but ready sharp ones and chuck them away
I always had my paper-hanging shears sharpened until the guy who did it retired.
Found someone else who did it but they came back en-even - not good for cutting £100 a roll papers!
Now I just have to buy crappy but ready sharp ones and chuck them away
#26
Scooby Regular
Theres a few but ebay is too established.
You can't use ebay anymore to launch a new business and selling little stuff personally is too expensive.
Ebay seems to be 70% drop shipping these days anyway.
Selling odd stuff like old RC equipment you could have it on other auction sites for weeks without selling and it's gone first time on ebay but it's costs you £10 instead of £4 - for instance.
You can't use ebay anymore to launch a new business and selling little stuff personally is too expensive.
Ebay seems to be 70% drop shipping these days anyway.
Selling odd stuff like old RC equipment you could have it on other auction sites for weeks without selling and it's gone first time on ebay but it's costs you £10 instead of £4 - for instance.
#27
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (10)
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Bristol
Posts: 1,391
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
ebay is too biased towards buyers. You take all the risk as a seller and ebay will never back you up.
I do about 100 sales a year on ebay and i estimate about 10-20% of customers just don't pay or request refunds because they didn't read the listing or they think your offer of free postage covers outer mongolia.
Most annnoyingly you cannot leave negative feedback for a buyer. You have to give positive or leave none.
I do about 100 sales a year on ebay and i estimate about 10-20% of customers just don't pay or request refunds because they didn't read the listing or they think your offer of free postage covers outer mongolia.
Most annnoyingly you cannot leave negative feedback for a buyer. You have to give positive or leave none.
#29
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (13)
ebay is too biased towards buyers. You take all the risk as a seller and ebay will never back you up.
I do about 100 sales a year on ebay and i estimate about 10-20% of customers just don't pay or request refunds because they didn't read the listing or they think your offer of free postage covers outer mongolia.
Most annnoyingly you cannot leave negative feedback for a buyer. You have to give positive or leave none.
I do about 100 sales a year on ebay and i estimate about 10-20% of customers just don't pay or request refunds because they didn't read the listing or they think your offer of free postage covers outer mongolia.
Most annnoyingly you cannot leave negative feedback for a buyer. You have to give positive or leave none.