My thoughts on Pre-owned games

codemonkey

Shared on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 11:53
As my wife and I try to find ways to make our little business stand out from players like Eb/Gamestop, walmart, bestbuy, we've found many challenges and even a few reliefs.

It is obvious that pre-owned games is the way to make your cash. I'm not doubting that because I've seen how much margin you get for new games. However, I also believe that we can offer competitive re-buys and cheaper pre-owned games. Two reasons: lower operating expense and it stands us out from others.

In the defense of the Eb/Gamestop powerhouse, they've got to make their numbers at each store. They don't want to post any type of loss and they're each expected to bring in some number of $$ a quarter, right? Well, consider they're operating expenses. First, they hire many employees to push their products, they have a brick & morter store inside malls and such and they have to stock as much product as they can fit. That is expensive. So, at the end of the day, they may screw a few people out of pre-owned sales but they also must make profit after all the expenses.

An online only store that is run by one or two people have less expenses. Sure, e-commerce game stores may only capture 7% of the market online and not every single price will be better than other online stores if you dig deep enough -  but we only have to make enough money to live. EB stores have to rise to make more than enough to live. That's their challenge.

Secondly, by offering better prices there may be a better reason to make an online transaction over an in-store transaction. If we can pay out a higher price for pre-owned games it may be worth a customers time to try our system. If we sell pre-owned games for less, you will have more reason to shop there, right? That's the theory anyway :) Buy buying/selling at a real online store you remove some of the "risk" invovled with bidding on products at auction. You can trust the online retailer (else they'll be out of business fast with bad comments and issues).

I think eBay is a good help as well. People are buying and selling games and products all the time. Wouldn't EB make more cash if they bought out half the stock of used games being sold on eBay? Seems reasonable. My hope is that I can get some great deals on used games online by offering to buy them at a price that the seller wants to sell them at. More of a bartering system "I'm willing to sell CoD2 to you for $20.00" and we say "I'm willing to buy it for $20.00" while another person is willing to sell that same game for $25.00 we'd be willing to buy it for that. Of course, there is a point where we'd not be willing to buy it - but each person is asking a unique price. One does not have to say "you want to sell it? I'll buy it for $14.00, take it or leave it." That is what makes eBay a nice play to shop for pre-owned games.

Of course, there is the hassle and the unknowns. You may never get the game, you may get a game that's scratched to hell, etc. However, if the person as a fairly good rating you may be ok. I think, if you plan to win some and lose a few, you've got a chance. Not everything will be perfect and sure it will be a hassle, but if it makes you money in the end, that's all that really matters. After all, it's a job.

Lastly, I've found you can get some cool old stuff on eBay. Pallets of NES/SNES systems, games, PS1's, Dreamcasts, etc. So, perhaps we can have a "bargain bin" of products and old school retro stuff for a cheap price. I think that would be cool, anyone think they'd buy a NES again?

CodeMonkey

Comments

Em's picture
Submitted by Em on Fri, 09/22/2006 - 02:54
dude i woudl totally buy from YOU and your wife rather than any local gamestore, just so you know:) and btw, why dont you ever come into site chat and help us pwn dsmooth? not that its that dif to do:)
NoGame22's picture
Submitted by NoGame22 on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:00
i'd totally buy the older systems if I could get a good price with a boat load of games.
codemonkey's picture
Submitted by codemonkey on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:03
awesome. Yeah, we'd like to make that an item that can be bought, just not an item we can always say we've got in stock. Say we find a closeout sale or auction where someone is selling a ton of old school products. If we buy it, we can resell it to you for a bit (to make money of course) but still offer you a ton of fun for a cheap price. CodeMonkey
Gatsu's picture
Submitted by Gatsu on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:10
Dreamcast!!!
Pooka's picture
Submitted by Pooka on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:19
This is near and dear to my heart because I am a true classics lover. I've recently shelled out money for a 2600, an NES, and a Dreamcast. I still would like a SNES, a few sega systems(master system, genesis, sega cd... maybe even a game gear). So finding a store online that I could get those things and games for them would be a great experience. There are the occasional eBay store that has collections of stuff... but their prices are almost always ridiculous. One thing to look at though is possible cost of reconditioning the systems/games you get. Like if you got a bunch of NES systems... you would want to put the new 72 pin connectors in them, and clean off the contacts and all that. Also, with cartridge games you would probably want to clean off the contacts on the cartridge. People would be much happier if they buy a "vintage" game/system knowing that it has been thoroughly looked over, cleaned, and made just a little closer to new. Letting people know that you took the time and effort to do those things would probably net you a little extra per game/system... and a whole lot in customer appreciation. I really hope everything goes well for you with this. I'd buy from ya.
codemonkey's picture
Submitted by codemonkey on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:25
Poonga, I totally agree. Also, unlike EB and such any used consoles will have to go through a few hours of play. EB turns it on, sees it boot, and sell it. That's not cool because some systems may overheat with a few hours of play. That's not going to fly in a sale. You sell a box, and it doesn't work, now you have to return it to get another one or whatever. Lots of costs in shipping and such (since its an online store). So, in best practice, we've got to assure that the product works over an extended period of time or send it in for refurb, sell for parts or write it off as dead). CodeMonkey
Pooka's picture
Submitted by Pooka on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:38
btw... if you have any systems that have problems I do repairs. ;)
SirPoonga's picture
Submitted by SirPoonga on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:49
code, you meant to say Pooka, not Poonga :) I bought a 5 cent breakout atari 2600 cart the other day... There's two things I look for when I go to get a used game, the price is right and can I get a good deal on a trade in. For price that's a go by feel thing. To me Gamestop does it wrong. Their used prices are $5 less than retail. For $5 I will make sure I have a crisp clean copy. Also make sure you have CD cleaning supplies like a CD doctor or something. You can buff out many of the scratches. Talking NES, there's a couple of places to buy a new NES system. They are a little expensive, I think. http://www.playmessiah.com http://www.gamesoftinc.com/NES.asp
codemonkey's picture
Submitted by codemonkey on Thu, 09/21/2006 - 12:54
Oops, Pooka, poonga... both of you talked retro and I know Poonga is a big retro-fan...my bad. I guess if we can get new NES systems at a good cost, that's ok. But I won't buy them at retail price and mark'em up, that wouldn't be useful. We can get CD doctor and such from the distributor, I had a plan to get that to make sure all pre-owned are as good as new as possible. Pooka, you repair consoles???

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