Options
Do you ever tell the dealer that you cherry picked?
jmj3esq
Posts: 5,421 ✭
I just wanted to poll you guys and gals as to whether or not you ever tell a dealer after you made a huge profit or cherry pick off of a coin they sold you. I see people getting the "you suck" award all the time and wonder if they ever go back and tell the person the bought it from about it.
0
Comments
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
Best Franklin Website
-I don't want him to hold a grudge
-I want to cherrypick him again
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
Information is valuable.
Steve
2.Memorize the Cherry Picker guide. Looking things up while at dealer's table serves only to annoy said dealer.
3.Ask if you can borrow the dealer's loupe. This qualifies as advanced cherry picking technique.
4.Return the loupe to the dealer and thank for allowing you to use.
5. Make at least a modest purchase from the dealer even if no cherry was to be found.
If a picture wasn't going very well I'd put a puppy dog in it, always a mongrel, you know, never one of the full bred puppies. And then I'd put a bandage on its foot... I liked it when I did it, but now I'm sick of it.
Norman Rockwell
<< <i>3.Ask if you can borrow the dealer's loupe. This qualifies as advanced cherry picking technique. >>
My icon IS my coin. It is a gem 1949 FBL Franklin.
<< <i>3.Ask if you can borrow the dealer's loupe. This qualifies as advanced cherry picking technique. >>
Bonus points if you throw in the off-hand comment, "Obviously you're not using it."
... and to the original question, no, you don't tell, even if they ask. Unless you hate the guy and/or enjoy the smell of burning bridges.
Sean Reynolds
"Keep in mind that most of what passes as numismatic information is no more than tested opinion at best, and marketing blather at worst. However, I try to choose my words carefully, since I know that you guys are always watching." - Joe O'Connor
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
Like the time when an Ebay seller shilled his auction to drive the price up.
Pissed me off big time.
I made it a real point after I received the coin to tell him how happy I was with the good deal I got, since the coin was an extremely rare variety that the other bidders hadn't recognized, and how it was worth many multiples of what I'd paid.
I told him my high bid was 40 times what the auction closed at. (This was true)
I told him I'd watch his auctions and bid on more of his coins.
He emailed me back and said he wasn't going to sell any more coins on Ebay.
Ray
<< <i>1.Telling is not advised. It's considered bad form and seeing many cherry pits is in your future.
2.Memorize the Cherry Picker guide. Looking things up while at dealer's table serves only to annoy said dealer.
3.Ask if you can borrow the dealer's loupe. This qualifies as advanced cherry picking technique.
4.Return the loupe to the dealer and thank for allowing you to use.
5. Make at least a modest purchase from the dealer even if no cherry was to be found. >>
If the dealer asks to use your loupe is he cherry picking you ? .....
Ken
<< <i>I just wanted to poll you guys and gals as to whether or not you ever tell a dealer after you made a huge profit or cherry pick off of a coin they sold you. I see people getting the "you suck" award all the time and wonder if they ever go back and tell the person the bought it from about it. >>
He doesn't tell you that he's sleeping with your wife, does he?
TD
NSDR - Life Member
SSDC - Life Member
ANA - Pay As I Go Member
<< <i>Sometimes.
Like the time when an Ebay seller shilled his auction to drive the price up.
Pissed me off big time.
I made it a real point after I received the coin to tell him how happy I was with the good deal I got, since the coin was an extremely rare variety that the other bidders hadn't recognized, and how it was worth many multiples of what I'd paid.
I told him my high bid was 40 times what the auction closed at. (This was true)
I told him I'd watch his auctions and bid on more of his coins.
He emailed me back and said he wasn't going to sell any more coins on Ebay.
Ray >>
ROTFLMAO
<< <i>No. It's mean spirited. >>
Yea, verily.
One dealer I bought from looked through the foreign coins I bought (as if he was taking mental notes). He didn't change his pricing or refuse to sell them, but I noticed his offerings on the next visit weren't as attractively priced.
A dealer has every right to do so and learn from his selling "mistakes", but rubbing his nose in it doesn't do anything but make shame him and make him mad.
Obscurum per obscurius
He knows that he can't be an expert in everything, and as long as he's making the profit he wants, he's not greedy. It's actually worked to my advantage on occasion, since he knows that I can turn around certain types of material quickly and at a decent price, so he'll buy accordingly with the intent of wholesaling the material to me. He knows full well he could do better by retailing those pieces himself, but given time constraints, he'd rather get 40% of the profit out of a deal with a minimum investment of labor and time.
A perfect example is a stamp accumulation I purchased from him for $750 from last year. I was there when he bought it at $600. I was able to turn it around for $1,100. I ended up making more on the merchandise than he did. But he also knows I spent quite a few hours photographing and writing up the material.
It's all in how you approach it. If you act like a gloating ass, then you're just being a pr*ck. But if it's an honest exchange of information with a dealer you trust, it can be mutually beneficial...
1/2 Cents
U.S. Revenue Stamps
<< <i>Nothing good can come of it. >>
AU CONTRAIRE !!!!! those who let me know sure got me to be more careful in what I put out.
Friend of mine was getting some absolutely SCRUMPTIOUS coins from some dealer in the SF bay area. Oh golly, were they neat! He was buying and slabbing up a storm and getting back such neat and rare stuff that he just couldn't RESIST tellin the dealer.
Golly.......... no more neat coins. I got my Classic Large Cent from him.
I'm not anticipating any more.
Matt
<< <i>Nah, you get bonus points if you can take a picture of the cherrypick with your cellphone camera and send it to someone, say, Russ, and get away with the cherrypick >>
Poor Marty.
Russ, NCNE