Used book business idea.

Sig99

Free Member
Feb 3, 2021
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0
Hi, just a passing idea I had- no idea of the full ins and outs, so please don't shoot me down!

Just wondered about buying/renting a place for free book donations from people that I can then resell.

I've been collecting some from gumtree etc and using Amazon and ziffit to sell, but wondered if having a set place people could drop them off would work?

Any insights on this/legalities?

Cheers

Sig
 

DWS

Free Member
Oct 26, 2018
1,704
4
587
Bridgend, South Wales
Hi, just a passing idea I had- no idea of the full ins and outs, so please don't shoot me down!

Just wondered about buying/renting a place for free book donations from people that I can then resell.

I've been collecting some from gumtree etc and using Amazon and ziffit to sell, but wondered if having a set place people could drop them off would work?

Any insights on this/legalities?

Cheers

Sig
Why do you think people would give books to you for free rather than giving to a charity shop where the charity can benefit from the sale.
 
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Lisa Thomas

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Apr 20, 2015
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Second hand books are so cheap. I'm not sure you would be able to make enough profit to cover any overheads.
 
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BusterBloodvessel

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  • Jan 22, 2018
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    Why do you think people would give books to you for free rather than giving to a charity shop where the charity can benefit from the sale.

    I know a number of charity shops near me won't accept books, or periodically won't anyway, as they have too many of them and people don't buy them.

    Which could be good for the OP, as it gives somewhere for people to get rid of them. But also bad for the OP, if it proves there's no market for second hand books!
     
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    I know a number of charity shops near me won't accept books, or periodically won't anyway, as they have too many of them and people don't buy them.

    Which could be good for the OP, as it gives somewhere for people to get rid of them. But also bad for the OP, if it proves there's no market for second hand books!
    Popular fiction. You'll get them by the container full, but at £1.50 a pop - and slow moving - you'll struggle to pay the rent.
     
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    Lisa Thomas

    Business Member
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    Apr 20, 2015
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    People have free book stalls, libraries, kindles, and audio books nowadays. Sadly, it's a dying trade imo.
     
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    Mister B

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    Aug 31, 2007
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    I agree with pretty much all of the above, in that the days of second hand paperbacks are long gone.

    However, if you find a niche that involves older, hardbacks that are more than likely non fiction, then there is money to be made. That being said though the effort involved to try and find these books is immense, and the amount that you would have to invest in storage would be too much. For these reasons alone I don't think it worthwhile.
     
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    fisicx

    Moderator
    Sep 12, 2006
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    Collectable books and comics however is very lucrative.
     
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    ethical PR

    Free Member
  • Apr 20, 2009
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    Hi, just a passing idea I had- no idea of the full ins and outs, so please don't shoot me down!

    Just wondered about buying/renting a place for free book donations from people that I can then resell.

    I've been collecting some from gumtree etc and using Amazon and ziffit to sell, but wondered if having a set place people could drop them off would work?

    Any insights on this/legalities?

    Cheers

    Sig
    If I had books I wanted to donate I would give them to charity why would I give them to you to make a profit from ??
     
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    Picture Bute

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    Apr 27, 2021
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    I know a number of charity shops near me won't accept books, or periodically won't anyway, as they have too many of them and people don't buy them.

    Which could be good for the OP, as it gives somewhere for people to get rid of them. But also bad for the OP, if it proves there's no market for second hand books!
    ^^ This. All of my local charity shops have days when you come in and 'take as many books as you want free' becuase people just don't buy them.
     
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    There's something about books - any books, no matter how rubbish - that makes people (including me) reluctant to throw them in the bin or on the bonfire. It's one of those things you feel that civilised people just don't do.

    Hence the plethora of cheap paperbacks handed in to charity shops and anywhere else that'll take them. The problem, as has been pointed out, is that no-one wants to buy them.
     
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    Lucan Unlordly

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    Feb 24, 2009
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    I know a number of charity shops near me won't accept books, or periodically won't anyway, as they have too many of them and people don't buy them.
    One of the charities round here would take all you could give them, for sale on a very good Ebay shop. They done well pre and during the Covid lockdown but struggled to get any consistency. Decent Cookery books would sell like hot cakes (pun fully intended:p), but they inherited too much rubbish along the way.
     
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    Lucan Unlordly

    Free Member
    Feb 24, 2009
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    I've been collecting some from gumtree etc and using Amazon and ziffit to sell, but wondered if having a set place people could drop them off would work?

    Thanks for the responses. I've been making an ok profit from the free ones I've managed to pick up. Just thought it was worth asking. Cheers

    Don't give up at the first hurdle....

    The one reason some folk don't drop off at charity shops is because it's inconvenient, too far to drive etc., A single drop off point would have the same disadvantages.

    Your advantage in sourcing from Gumtree gives you the chance to buy what you think can sell. If you get some you can't sell, donate them to charity!
     
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