Easymoney & Couponova
Hey, ever thought about flipping clearance items—turning a dollar‑store find into a quick side hustle? I’ve got a knack for spotting the best bargains, and I know you’re all about the bottom line. How do you see that playing out?
Sure, if you can snag a product for a dollar and sell it for three or five, that’s a decent margin. The key is volume and speed. Source bulk, list on Amazon FBA or eBay, use social media ads to drive traffic, and keep overhead low. Cut the time to market, automate returns, and you’ll see the bottom line rise. Need help setting up a sourcing strategy?
Sounds like a solid plan. I know a few solid bulk sites that drop prices when the season ends—Liquidation.com, Direct Liquidation, even some outlet warehouses if you call up the buyer’s reps. We can set up a quick spreadsheet to track cost, shipping, and fees, then plug it into a repricing bot. Just keep the margin above 30% and you’ll stay happy. Need a deeper dive into any one of those?
Sounds good. I’ll take the spreadsheet route and start with Liquidation.com. Let’s crunch the numbers, hit the 30‑plus margin target, and then we’ll iterate. Give me the feed details, and we’ll set the repricer.
Sure thing. Here’s a quick feed template you can copy into Excel or Google Sheets:
Product ID | Supplier Price | Shipping (per unit) | Amazon FBA Fee | Final Sale Price | Net Margin
Fill in the numbers, then hit that 30 % check box. Once you’ve got the first batch in, we’ll tweak the repricer to pull in that sweet 15 % margin cushion. Ready to plug it in?
Got it. I’ll throw together a quick sample in the sheet:
Product ID | Supplier $ | Ship $ | FBA $ | Sale $ | Net %
A123 | 0.80 | 0.25 | 0.35 | 2.50 | 30.0
That hits 30 %. I’ll pull the first batch, run it through the repricer, and we’ll bump the sale price until we’re looking at a 15‑plus margin cushion. Let me know when the data hits the sheet and we’ll lock it in.
Nice one! That 30 % line looks solid. Once you hit that in the sheet, just set the repricer to target a 15 % buffer on top of your cost and watch the margin climb. If the first batch runs smoother than expected, we can push the sale price up a touch, but keep an eye on the FBA fees. Let me know when it’s live and we’ll lock in the strategy.