Selling large, High ranked Registry Complete Set

Good afternoon all-
I am looking to sell a complete Vintage set, ranked #4 on the Registry- 1971 Topps Baseball.
I don't think I want to go the Auction route. Any suggestions on how to go about this? Do I just send a mass email to every dealer around and see what happens? I'm just not sure what to do and I would welcome any suggestions.
Thanks
Rob
I am looking to sell a complete Vintage set, ranked #4 on the Registry- 1971 Topps Baseball.
I don't think I want to go the Auction route. Any suggestions on how to go about this? Do I just send a mass email to every dealer around and see what happens? I'm just not sure what to do and I would welcome any suggestions.
Thanks
Rob
Interested primarily in:
-Topps Dodgers cards in PSA 9, 1952-1979
-1971 Topps in PSA 9
-Topps Dodgers cards in PSA 9, 1952-1979
-1971 Topps in PSA 9
0
Comments
-Topps Dodgers cards in PSA 9, 1952-1979
-1971 Topps in PSA 9
Your going to get offers for your set, no doubt. But every offer will be below break up value which should be expected as the amount of work required to piece that out. My last big purchase was about 700 or so cards and it took me a solid 40 hours+ of work. Although, I listed them fixed price and VCP'ed every single card. If they went straight to auction, it would have been much quicker.
BTW, I'll do the work for you. I have a solid Ebay account and my own website for image hosting so that I get big, nice 200 dpi pictures instead of crappy Ebay picture hosting. I have a couple hundred 71's in my store right now so I have a decent folowing for them too.
I would potentially buy it at a price and I know another person who would buy it at a price.
Selling it card by card entails a lot of work and a lot of risk.
Boom and your done the other way.
Suggest a price--e-mail me at jdc122@aol.com
Jim
<< <i>Card-by-card = larger return. IMO >>
Absolutely. But you would also get far more frustration per hour and much less $$$ per hour.
<< <i>I consigned a lot of 60+ 1986 Fleer basketball PSA 10's to Mile High a few years back with 0% sellers juice. Most high pops and the biggest star was Joe Dumars. It went unbeliveably well. It sold for much higher than what I paid collectively.
Maybe that is a exception to the norm story, but there is a lot aggrevation and time committment to breaking it up piece by piece especially if you have a regular job. >>
I would compute the chances of doing better selling is a lot at less than zero. It will not happen. Of course, breaking it up is a pain.
<< <i>I consigned a lot of 60+ 1986 Fleer basketball PSA 10's to Mile High a few years back with 0% sellers juice. Most high pops and the biggest star was Joe Dumars. It went unbeliveably well. It sold for much higher than what I paid collectively.
Maybe that is a exception to the norm story, but there is a lot aggrevation and time committment to breaking it up piece by piece especially if you have a regular job. >>
Well one thing, the market was super hot in 2007-2008. If you bought in 2004-2005 and then sold 3 years later, you would have done really well on just about any card. Not sure when you bought and sold though.