Tone-Mark Creative
Old-School Sign Man living in the present
I recently placed a couple of for sale ads on Craigslist which I had never tried before and I'm curious about what experiences others may have had. I tried Craigslist because both items were too big to ship so I was looking for locals that could pick up.
My experience generated just three responses. One was entirely too easy and I'm pretty sure was someone trying to scam me. One would not discuss their interest in the item until they could "verify" my cell phone number... which they were not able to do, and one seemed legit but never followed up on my reply accepting their slightly discounted offer.
Is Craigslist something you find useful or is it a waste of time?
Fred,
Craigslist is where the rubber meets the road in humans trusting one another and playing fair and legitimate. If there is a high degree of symbiosis, (i.e. you really want what they are buying or vice versa) then it is pretty much slam dunk; meet up exchange cash for merchandise. You are selling something pretty large, but in the event you were not, sometimes I find it better to meet up in a central location as opposed to having someone come to my house/ shop I've never met. McDonald's is pretty neutral.
The problem most of the time is that unless you practically giving your item away you may not get many responses initially. If the equipment etc. is so esoteric in nature only a handful of people might ever even be looking for it. It may be necessary to post in two or three cycles. Instant gratification is not so much a factor unless as I said, you are practically giving it away.
It is important to pick the right category for your sale item. That being said, you are right in avoiding the obvious scammers, looking for you to slip and give up some important personal/ banking info, try to pass off a cashier's check, etc. Only take cash.
On the positive side, I have acquired many items as well as sold many items. But this is where it comes into human trust. There is no safety umbrella, as with eBay, Amazon, etc. If you buy something assuming the seller has your best interest at heart and it turns out to be a lemon, well that's just about it. You/ they are stuck with it. As with eBay, Reverb, etc. lots of pictures and lots of background about what you are selling tends to weed out scammers. Depending what I am selling, I have created little logos in SignLab Corel. and attach at the bottom corner to all photos; this ups the ante of your own credibility and scares off fly-by-nights.
Craigslist has taught me to sell/ buy defensively. It is like an electronic second hand store. And there is nothing like finding something you really want that someone else does not, and getting a good deal on it. It can be a win-win!