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Cheap Dyson Vacuum for parts
I've seen people part out vacuums - I've never done it. I just picked up a Dyson at an estate sale for $10.00. It was marked with $20 and a sign that said "does not spin" I made an effort to seem interested in it and walked away. The guy at the checkout table said, "it works, it sucks, the thing at the bottom just doesn't spin." i told him i just saw a video of a guy parting them out, but I'm not so sure i want to take the risk at $20. He came back at me, "wanna take the risk at $10." I bought it right up. I was actually willing to at $20, but wanted to see if my tactic worked. I should be able to part it out at around $150.00.
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Reproduction Game Stuff - Turn Nostalgia Into Repeatable eBay Sales
One of my favorite types of reselling is finding products where you can create a repeatable listing instead of constantly hunting for one-off items. A great example is old board games from the 80s and 90s. There’s an old game called HeroQuest. It’s basically a simplified version of Dungeons & Dragons and has a huge cult following. Over the years it had a bunch of expansion packs, and many of those included special cards, manuals, and accessories that are now extremely expensive on eBay. Instead of trying to source original copies, I found scans of the cards from multiple sources online. I cleaned them up, rebuilt the decks, and had them professionally printed through PrinterStudio. Now I sell reproduction decks on eBay. I’ve also started doing this with: - Fireball Island - Warhammer Quest This is the kind of business model I love because: - You create the listing once - You can stock quantity instead of listing individual items - Shipping is easy - The audience already exists - Nostalgia collectors are always searching for replacement parts and accessories Most of my decks cost around: - $8–$10 each to produce Typical selling prices: - $35–$40 for standard decks - $80–$100 for larger or rarer decks So far: - HeroQuest sells the best - Fireball Island does pretty well - Warhammer Quest has been slower The bigger lesson here is this: Look for old games, manuals, cards, charts, expansion materials, instruction booklets, reference sheets, or missing accessories that collectors need but are hard to find. If you can: 1. Find or scan high-quality originals 2. Clean them up in an editing program 3. Have them professionally reproduced 4. Create a clean eBay listing …you can build a surprisingly easy semi-passive income stream from niche collector communities. Some of these niches are way bigger than people realize.
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Trash To Cash
Everyday Things People Throw Away That Can Actually Make You Money All this research has come from eBay sold listings. All ideas below have recent sold comps. Before we start - a reality check. Some of these ideas take time to accumulate. Some only make a few dollars at a time. You are probably not going to become a millionaire selling wine corks, Altoid tins, or Monopoly pieces. But this is exactly how a lot of resellers start learning how to think differently. The point is not that every item is life-changing money. The point is training yourself to see opportunity where other people see trash. Over time, small flips add up, sourcing skills improve, and you start discovering bigger and bigger opportunities. This is also for people who may not have much money to start with. Sometimes an extra $20, $50, or $100 from things that were literally headed to the garbage can make a huge difference. Most people only think:• Garage sales• Thrift stores• Facebook Marketplace But there are opportunities everywhere if you know what to look for. Here are real things people throw away, ignore, or overlook that can actually be sold online. PARTING OUT BROKEN OR INCOMPLETE ITEMS Board Game Pieces Instead of selling incomplete games cheaply, part them out. Examples:• Mousetrap pieces• Monopoly tokens• Dice• Instructions• Replacement cards Many people lose one piece and would rather spend $10-$20 replacing it than buying an entirely new game. Earning Potential:• Small pieces: $5-$15• Rare replacement parts: $20+• Large bulk lots can add up quickly Best Places to Source:• Free boxes• Yard sales• Incomplete game bins• Estate sales Empty Video Game Console Boxes Earning Potential:• Common boxes: $10-$30• Rare vintage boxes: $100+ Lego Manuals Kids lose interest in instruction books constantly. Lego collectors want original manuals to complete sets. Earning Potential:• Common manuals: a few dollars each• Rare sets: $20-$100+ Sell common ones in a bulk lot. Vacuum Cleaner Parts
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Welcome
Welcome to Flippin’ Millionaire- a community built for resellers who want to think beyond the obvious. This group is focused heavily on sourcing: finding inventory in creative, overlooked, and unconventional ways that most resellers never even consider. While garage sales and thrift stores still have their place, this community is about going deeper like estate cleanouts, liquidation opportunities, auctions, bulk deals, business closures, Facebook Marketplace strategies, networking, scrap pickups, storage units, curb finds, local contacts, niche categories, and hidden opportunities most people walk right past. The goal is simple: help each other find better inventory, make more profit, and build real income through reselling. Inside the group we share: • Creative sourcing strategies • Real-world reseller tips and tricks • What’s actually selling • Mistakes to avoid • Ways to scale sourcing beyond part-time flipping • Networking and community support • Behind-the-scenes sourcing methods most people don’t talk about Whether you’re brand new or already flipping full time, this group is about learning how to source smarter, faster, and more profitably.
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Flippin' Millionaire
skool.com/flippin-millionaire
A group to share reselling tips and tricks with a focus on the hardest part - SOURCING items to resell.
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