Archive for the ‘Shipping’ Category

How to Pack and Ship Used Books

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

There are a lot of steps to selling a book, you have to find them, evaluate them, buy them, store them, organize them, list them and sell them. However, after all that there is one last step, and as far as your customer is concerned, it’s probably the most important of all: sending your books to their new owners.

Shipping brings with it a new set of questions: what carrier to use, what speed, what cost, can you get tracking, insurance, etc., etc. etc. All of those are important, and I may go into them another time, but today I want to talk about how to pack your books, what it is that you actually ship them in.

As with most things, you have a number of choices when it comes to packing your books. You can go quick and dirty (and cheap!) all the way up to having dedicated machinery for just that purpose. There are a few different factors to consider when selecting the method that’s right for you, including its cost, the image it projects and how well it will actually protect the books.

Brown Paper Bags
It was good enough to cover your 5th grade history textbook, so shouldn’t it be good enough to cover the books you send across the country? Well, maybe not. While brown paper bags do have the advantages of being cheap and/or free and readily available, you should think about the fact that it may not create the greatest image of you in the mind of your customer. Even if a paper-wrapped book gets to the customer in pristine condition (which it might not) the cheap wrapping could have a conscious or unconscious effect on how the customer views you, which in turn affects how they rate you. If you are running your own site, it also can affect whether they will give you repeat business or recommend you to others.

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Shipping Used Books Through the Post Office Could Cost More Than Ever

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Shipping the books you sell on Amazon may soon cost you more than ever. The U.S. Post Office is in trouble. Deep trouble. And that means we can expect more rate hikes coming down the pike.

The USPS’s woes stem from a number of factors. The continued encroachment of the internet on mail’s traditional role in communication is still impacting the volume of mail that’s sent each year. In addition, the economic crisis hit industries like real estate, which usually accounts for a pretty high volume of direct mail, harder than most.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the Postal Service “reported a nearly $2 billion loss for the second quarter ended March 31, with mail volume down nearly 15% from the year before”. According to a statement released by the Post Office itself in February, if current trends continue, “the Postal Service could experience a year-end net loss significantly higher than last year’s $2.8 billion loss”.

So what does all this mean for us as humble sellers of books?

Expect the Post Office to raise rates every six months.

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