Adam's Picks

Announcing New, Innovative Ways to Source Your Inventory

After many long months of delays I’m proud to announce my newest eBook entitled How to Source Used Books is finally done!  I originally hesitated writing this due to the amount of detail I reveal in it.  Frankly, I was a little scared at first for fear that revealing this information would somehow affect my own sources.  I don’t just say this for marketing fluff.  It really did take me awhile to get up the courage to write this eBook!  However, after I thought about it and how I regularly tell readers that I’m 100% open with everything it would be almost hypocritical of me to hold back this information.  Also, because my readership is on an international scale I think I can take my chances that no one that purchases this eBook lives close enough to me to matter.

What makes this eBook different is that I not only tell you all my sources and every source I’ve heard of but I teach you how to get your own sources!  I think giving you a list of sources and saying good luck isn’t enough.  Everyone’s situation is going to be different and what works in my area may not work in yours.  This is why I wanted to teach you skills and idea-generating topics so that you could apply the same principles I use just in your own way.  I’m very excited to finally get this newest eBook completed and hope that it really helps your business.

I’m also offering my always 100% money-back guarantee on this eBook so no need to feel like you’re taking a big risk.

If you value your business and are running short of books to sell this is the eBook for you.  It is the most important piece that has allowed me to grow my business and I’m sure it will help yours as well.

- Adam

Apologies

I apologize for the problems lately.  I recently moved this blog to a new webhost which proved to be a much more daunting task than anticipated.  WordPress is a behemoth of an application and managing to get the pages, posts, forum and all settings over just right the first time was a pipe dream.  I believe I’ve fixed all issues that I’ve seen.  If you see any more problems, please let me know via the contact form.

Thanks for being a loyal reader.

Adam

The Importance of Sourcing

Hi guys.  Adam here.  I know it’s been awhile since a post and I apologize, but I’ve got a great post for today and some exciting news!  Summer is upon us and it’s time to start getting out there and finding some books to sell.  I always hated scouting in the winter because of the gloomy weather but the spring and summer time was pretty fun.  Since I started buying in bulk long ago I haven’t been able to get out and enjoy the weather but financially it was the best decision for me.

In any case, for all of you out book scouting hitting up those yard sales, thrift stores and FOL sales I’ve got an important announcement for you.  Also, for anyone that has decided to reel in books by the ton instead of by the title and buy in bulk I’ve also got something important to share.  The inventory sourcing eBook I’ve been promising forever (sorry!) is finally nearing completion!  It will be available via the email list first starting on Friday, May 20th.  You’re already signed up aren’t you?  I’m finally setting a date so you can hold me accountable.  I could give you some lame excuse at how I was too busy and that I was diligently working on it 24/7 for all this time but that would be a lie.  Family, friends, work, books, eBizControl, a new inventory receiving app I’m working on and life simply trumped the project for awhile.  I have, however, managed to spill my brain into this thing and literally take dozens of hours dumping every source I’ve ever used or have known to be used in this eBook.

I’m very proud of this eBook because it’s not conventional in any way.  I don’t simply give you a spreadsheet and say “Here’s your list of sources now give me your money.”  However you can just give me your money if you really want to.  In all seriousness, I attempt to give you the tools and show you HOW to source books not just WHERE to source books.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m going to include what I call a ‘”cheat sheet” at the end for all of you to devour if simply want to take it and run.  More importantly though, it’s all about how you should be thinking so you can come out with your own local sources on the fly.  It will spark ideas in your head that you’d never even considered.  I have a unique mind (ask my wife) and I tend to come up with very unconventional methods to accomplish conventional goals.  I share this thinking with you in the eBook.

Enough with the shameless self promotion and whetting your appetite.  I wonder if this whole lack of supply idea really increases demand.  Eh, we’ll see. wlEmoticon smile The Importance of Sourcing Just so that you haven’t read this entire post so far without some good information to go on I’ve decided to share a piece of of the eBook with you today.  It’s a section from the beginning basically introducing the topic of sourcing and why it’s important.  I hope you enjoy it.

Sourcing Introduction

Sourcing.  It sounds like such a professional word, doesn’t it?  To me, sourcing goes hand in hand with other business terms like strategy, innovation, logistics and procurement.  However, when you break it down, it’s actually a very easy concept to understand.  At its most basic level, sourcing is simply a process by where you find things.  Forget selling for moment.  The word sourcing simply means where you find people, products, supplies, etc.  It’s a very basic concept and one that I truly want you to understand.

We can take it a step further and explain the term in a more useful manner to define it as “where to find products to sell not even specifically related to our niche of book selling”.  The number of different businesses is about how many types of sourcing you’ll find in the business world.  Manufacturers need to source raw materials to create products.   Distributors need to source manufacturers to find products to sell to large wholesalers.  Wholesalers need to find distributors to get access to products.  Finally, retailers need to find wholesalers to sell products to people like you and me.  It’s a huge chain in which the original raw materials come out of the earth, get morphed into a product, get exchanged hands a few times with an ever-increasing price and finally make it to you and me in the form of our new iPhone, kitchen cleaner or car part.  I’m sure sourcing isn’t a foreign concept to you; after all, you bought this book.  If you didn’t have an idea on what sourcing meant, I doubt you would have given the title a second look.  Let’s take a deeper look into book sourcing now to give you a sense of its importance.

The Importance of Sourcing

As an online bookseller or a merchant in general, if you don’t have a product to sell, what do you have?  I doubt that customers are going to throw money at you because of your good looks.  You have to provide some kind of value for them and for us booksellers, that value is quality books at a competitive cost.  To be a successful online bookseller there are essentially 4 different processes you need to master: sourcing, listing, order fulfillment and customer service.  Each is necessary to the health of your business, but without sourcing, you have nothing to list and the cycle continues on down the line.

If you ever run into a situation where you have limited time to perform more duties that can possibly get done, you’ll need to prioritize.  To give you an idea of the importance of sourcing, picture the following scenario.  Realize that this doesn’t happen every day, but this is a real world example that I personally have had to overcome.  It is critical to know how to prioritize.

<insert eBook content spoiling personal example here>

I don’t want to tell you that this happens everyday because it does not, so don’t get scared about the potential pressure.  I only tell you this story from experience and what you must do to seize an opportunity to grow your business.  It is critical that you understand that sourcing is the #1 most important arrow in your quiver for more sales.

Now that I hope I’ve given you a sense of the importance of sourcing, I would like for you to get a good understanding of how we use sourcing.  To do this, it’s a great idea to paint a picture of where a book comes from and how it ends up in the hands of your lucky Amazon customer.  <insert one of my only sources I get my inventory from here> Unless I’m buying direct from the publisher or from a large retailer like Borders, Barnes and Noble or Amazon where the book is still “fresh”, I’m probably only seeing a small piece of a book’s life…

My First Book Scouting Adventure with Scoutpal

Guest post by James Cecil, Candlelight Books LLC.  I love these personal story posts.  Please contact me if you’d like to write about your personal experiences with selling online.  As a reminder, I always pay $10/post for 500 words or more upon approval. – Adam

Today, April 16th, 2011, was my first actual Friends of the Library book scouting adventure. Prior to getting ready for this venture to a library book sale I visited scoutpal.com and read everything about the service on its website there. I also read what other book sellers have said about it from reading their postings from the sellyourbooksonline.com blogs and forum postings topic “Third Party Tools” subtopic “Best Scout Service”.  Yes, I did check out the other book scouting software as well however, ScoutPal was the only one that worked with the Tracfone LG cell phone.

Before I began, I visited the ScoutPal website and checked out the information there about the service.  What I liked about ScoutPal is that they offered a week’s free service trial as well as easy to follow instructions on how to set up your phone to use with ScoutPal. After I got everything set up on my phone I took a couple of books from my inventory and ran them through the service. I also visited another website and that website was BookThink.com. BookThink.com has a ScoutPal guide for new users written by Craig Stark dated February 14th, 2005. This article contains information on what not to do with ScoutPal, how to practice with ScoutPal first, formatting your ScoutPal information, and how to interpret the data you get back from a book that you just researched.

Having read Mr. Stark’s ScoutPal guide I then proceeded on with configuring the data that I wanted ScoutPal to send to me when I researched a book I thought might be worth selling.  The data I chose  ScoutPal to return to me was the Amazon’s price, the lowest used price, the lowest new price, the lowest collectible price, the lowest price overall, the sales rank and a formula. The formula is where you can set up an array that will check the criteria of what you have set up. For example say I wanted to have this formula check when I do search for books that meet $10 or more I would simply write the code up as:

if (lowest >= 10) {
return(‘BUY!’);
}
if (lowest <= 10) {
return(‘MAYBE’);
}
if (lowest = 2) {
return(‘KEEP LOOKING’);
}

Adam’s note:  Scoutpal is the book scouting application that I started with.  Prior to developing my own custom receiving application I also previously used Scoutpal in a different way (as a receiving application).  I would buy leftovers from sales and other places and have my employees sit and scan all day.  I used this formula that James is talking about extensively.  Just for illustration here is the one I used.  If you think about it logically, you can probably make out what it’s doing.  As you can see, Scoutpal is much more open than other scouting services and if you’re technically savvy you can really do a lot of things with it.  The only downside is that it doesn’t know anything about FBA offers.

salesrank = ’0′ . salesrank;
if (countused < 1){
return(‘List Stack (Lone Wolf)’);
} elsif (countused > 1000){
return(‘Discard. (Too much competition) Try bookscouter.’);
} elsif ((salesrank >= 1) and (salesrank <= 1000000)){
return(‘FBA Stack (<1M salesrank)’);
} elsif ((salesrank > 1000000) and (salesrank <= 3000000) and (lowest > 7)){
return(‘List Stack (<3M salesrank)’);
} elsif ((salesrank > 3000000) and (salesrank <= 5000000) and (lowest > 15)){
return(‘List Stack (<5M salesrank)’);
} elsif ((salesrank > 5000000) and (salesrank <= 20000000) and (lowest > 50)){
return(‘List Stack (>$50)’);
} elsif ((lowest > 35) and (salesrank < 1)){
return(‘List Stack (Unranked > $35)’);
} else {
return(‘Discard. (Salesrank/Price ratio too low) Try bookscouter.’);
}

Satisfied with the setup I waited till the weekend to venture out to the Friends of the Library book sale here in Richmond, Kentucky. Granted, it wasn’t the Wednesday night’s sneak peek. That is the night that vendors get to come and look through all the books that the library is selling before the general public gets to come in and purchase books from the library. Since I’m running my business here on a part-time basis I was not able to attend the sneak peek night due to two factors. One my current employment and secondly it was not payday for me yet.

Saturday afternoon my wife and I ventured out to the Richmond Mall where the Richmond and Berea Library sale was being held. My wife picked out some books, VHS tapes, CD, DVDs, Audio Books, and CD’s for me to research. I ended up hand entering each one that she placed in front of me and  consulted the results. I got a lot of maybes and 2 buys from the ScoutPal service. When we both were finished with book scouting we then walked our two boxes full of books and VHS tapes over to a counter to where I did a final analysis of my books. I then applied a six sided damage check to each item for any damages.  I then asked myself if I would buy this at Amazon if I was it listed. Four books out of my current selection didn’t make it past this point.  In fact, one of these really felt like it wouldn’t generate enough profit for me regardless of its condition. That decision was based on the sales rank of the item. In all I walked away only paying $34 and spent an hour book scouting. Now my next phase is to clean the new inventory up that I’ve got, set the price of each item and list them in my Amazon bookstore.

Also, by going to this sale I learned that for a $10 membership sign up fee the local library here will alert me of when they plan on having their next sale. I also left them with a business card too. As a side note, during my book scouting adventure there was a lady who was looking for a dinosaur book for her son. Naturally I had found one and despite the fact that the result I got back from ScoutPal about the book I quickly handed book to the lady and asked her if it was the one she was looking for. It wasn’t but the size of the book and the amount of illustrations of the dinosaurs that sold the lady on the book but the one I just gave to her she had exclaimed “This one is much better for my child.  There are more pictures in it.” She thanked me and my wife and we both told her she was welcome and we continued on with our book scouting. Yeah, I could have just said nothing and kept the book for myself and made a nice profit off it but in a way I made a customer happy at that very moment. I’m happy with what I have purchased from my book scouting adventure and just may go back tomorrow and see what else I might be able to get.

How I sold 648,328 books in 27 days

This is the grand finale of posts by guest blogger, Frank Giovinazzi.  If you’re interested in writing for SYBO please let me know via email or the contact form.  I always pay $10 for a 500 word minimum post that entertains yet educates on the nature of selling books online.

- Adam

This is a story about how answering a simple Craigslist ad turned into the biggest deal I’ve ever done.

In March of 2010, a fellow placed a Craigslist ad for 275 specialty military books. He was asking top dollar, $275 for the lot and I had to look up the publisher to make sure I wasn’t buying boxes of junk. I didn’t have any experience with the particular line, so I did some research and determined it was okay, if a little high for me.  The books were clean and in good shape, and the seller was a good dude. We got along, even if he wouldn’t budge on the price [!], and we had a running conversation about books and publishing, as he is an editor/artist/writer/publisher. He mentioned who he worked for, a known entity, and that there was a possibility the foreign-owned parent company might shut them down after years of losses.

I mentioned at the time that if there were ever books in a warehouse that had to be liquidated, that I would be interested in purchasing some. At the time it was all small ball, and I thought maybe I could get as many as 5,000 new books pretty cheap.  The months rolled on and we stayed in intermittent contact. A couple times I checked in to say hello, a couple times I inquired after the status of the company. Like I said, we genuinely got along and I was being more friendly than mercenary.  When he finally told me the company was going to close, however, I again made the play for acquiring warehouse inventory. He said he would look into it and I went back to buying and selling.

He got back to me eventually to tell me there were about a quarter million books in a warehouse that had to be liquidated. It took me a second to make the shift before I blurted out, “I can broker that lot, no problem.”  As my lips were saying it my brain was countering, ‘that’s a whopper.’ I did have a vague idea about how a deal like that was done but no real experience.  More back and forth followed, more buying and selling on my part, with a note from my friend saying that there might be more books involved, because his company handled distribution for other lines, but that he had to check on permissions.  “No problem,” I repeated, now thinking about how the hell to actually do it.

More time passes and I buy some books from a guy who tells me he is going to the CIROBE conference. I had a vague notion of that organization, which stand for The Chicago International Remainder & Overstock Book Expo.  When my friend gets back to me it’s late October. When I ask him when the books have to be out of the warehouse, he answers, “Thanksgiving.”  Okay, I figure, somebody’s got to want a quarter million books in the next three weeks.

“How many books did you wind up with?”, I asked  “I’ll send you the list, but it’s about four hundred and twenty-five thousand,” he answers.  At this point we hadn’t talked about my compensation, but the atavistic greed organ sure did kick in at this point, even while I was thinking about how to pull this off. This is when I thought about the CIROBE conference and I called my colleague to see if he had a list of exhibitors.  “Go to their website,” he said, and I did.

My friend told me I could start soliciting potential buyers and I sent out an email to everyone from the CIROBE list, plus some other players I knew about, mainly job lot chains, and I even dared to send it to a contact I have at Amazon. The first email was exploratory, saying I could return a spreadsheet file to anyone who responded to this initial inquiry. I still didn’t have the spreadsheet file, but with three weeks to move the books figured I should get started.

The email had a subject line announcing 425K books available. When I got the spreadsheet file of publishers and titles, there were 648,328 books on it. I amended subsequent messages and hoped for the best.  Most of the people who responded after the first email responded with silence after the second. Not only was the deal extremely short term, there were thousands of books for each title, meaning they couldn’t effectively be sold online. The buyer would have to be able to move them to a brick and mortar chain with hundreds of locations, to spread the quantity around.

In our favor was that these were really good books, brand new, from a reputable company that was being liquidated. I even played as much hardball as I felt was appropriate, by telling people that the seller was willing to pulp the entire lot if a reasonable offer was not received by the deadline. Even though this had about as much credibility as an empty brown bag I used it anyway.  After a couple weeks of back and forth, it gets narrowed down to two parties. Along the way I made follow-up phone calls and emails, and got the selling party to agree to a decent sized commission for me if the deal went through.  Bear in mind this is November, the first month in my new place, sweating making rent and finding new sources of inventory to keep my retail operation going. I am not sleeping much.

One buyer seems the most serious, and capable of closing, but he needs extra time to move the books and to pay, and at this point I have to walk him to the buyer’s front door and make the introduction so they can hash it out. It’s out of my hands and I go back to hustling boxes of books.

Then the first and second buyer both need samples and I make that happen in concert with my friend at the company and his warehouse manager. More waiting. The first guy is ready to buy but he wants 60 days to pay. Which is kind of funny because since he knows the American division is closing he can theoretically take the books and stiff the German owners with a one-fingered salute.

More back and forth, but on the day he gets the samples he apparently is convinced and makes the deal.

My friend tells me it’s for $100,000, with half due in 30 days and half due in 60. The buyer gets all the books for approximately 15.4 cents each, but that is kind of misleading because they are going to destroy about 200,000 units. And when I say destroy, I mean send to the recycling plant, which pays by the ton. At about a pound a book, that 100 tons of paper, so whatever the recycler pays for that will go into the new owner’s pocket to offset his costs. And with 400,000 books to ship, costs are going to be considerable, given that there are going to be about 20 tractor-trailer loads going out the door.

I sent out the first emails on November 4 and got the word the deal was done on November 30. So I effectively sold 648,328 books in 27 days. It felt good in and of itself, if not quite real because I never saw or put my hands on any of the merchandise. Plus my friend thanked me for making it happen and told me I made him look good with his boss, so there was some real psychic reward there.  As far as my commission is concerned, I am still waiting for it as of this writing, but my friend’s boss has promised to pay me out of the first $50,000 received, which is pretty generous considering this is a company that is being liquidated. BTW, the check is for $6,500, so I basically earned a penny a book.

The deal happened so fast nothing was ever put in writing, but I trust the people involved to make good on the payment. The hurry up and make it happen nature of the deal certainly played to my advantage, because if there were a longer timeframe I doubt they would have just given the responsibility to a guy whose total previous experience amounted to selling books out of the basement.

But then again it turns out I wasn’t bluffing when I said, “I can broker that lot, no problem.”