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 Author: Brickitty View Messages Posted By Brickitty
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 18:11
 Subject: Re: Tracking and order pulling accuracy
 Viewed: 57 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Sgt._MacSquinch writes:
  I've probably placed 60+ orders over the last few months. I can say without
exaggeration that on at least 40% of those orders, there was no tracking number
provided. It's annoying enough when a seller can't be bothered to put
it where it belongs on the order form for the customer, but when I then go to
Paypal looking for one, and it isn't there, a simple annoyance becomes an
aggravation. Not providing tracking for customers shows an indifference to the
needs of the customer. That, and it's just plain lazy. There's also the
matter of sellers not bothering to check the merchandise for accuracy before
shipping. Twice in the last month I've had to deal with Batman figures, ordered
for a specific cape type, arriving with the wrong capes. Again, this is lazy.
Any kind of business that sells something has even the most basic quality control
practices in place. One can certainly tell the difference between pro sellers
who take what they do seriously, and the fly-by-night pop-up stores that are
just here to get the most bang for their bricks while they unload their unwanted
Lego. These lackluster sellers are contributing to an overall downturn, IMO,
in what should be a pleasurable buying experience, and frankly, I don't believe
the platform should continue to offer them the privilege, if they continue to
make customers unhappy. Go to Craig's List, place an ad in the paper, have
a rummage sale - whatever. Just take your bricks, your laziness, and your ineptitude
elsewhere.

I hear you. As a buyer, I was frequently frustrated by these issues too. Some
U.S. sellers wouldn't send tracking even when asked for it (and the EU really
needs to catch up with the U.S. -- for once -- by regulating and requiring
free tracking on all packages sent by public postal service). And then there
were the mistakes -- my overall error rate was 33% to 40% on orders with
at least one error in listing/packing, and well over 50% if I count orders with
at least one damaged piece but no incorrect pieces as part of the error rate.

That's why I run my store the way I do. I try to do the things I wanted as
a buyer on my 750+ orders. Tracking is uploaded to the order page AND included
in the Drive-Thru email for every single order. Turnaround time on shipping is
1-2 business days max, regardless of how busy I am. Orders are dropped off at
the post office rather than a dropbox, which often saves an entire day of shipping
time. Parts are bagged neatly and labeled if necessary. And most importantly,
I have a robust QA system that triple-checks every single order for accuracy
and quality. With hundreds of thousands of parts sold through various platforms,
I've never had a reliable report of a missing or incorrect part in an order
(though I admit that I have missed minor damage a handful of times). As a seller,
I hold myself to a very high standard, and I struggle to understand how other
people's standards for themselves are so low.

I have one of the largest used-parts inventories in the country, so feel free
to try out my store if you'd like. You'll get great service and great
parts, just like it says.
 Author: MinifigureHub View Messages Posted By MinifigureHub
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 17:59
 Subject: 20% SALE!! ALL PARTS
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 Topic: Sales
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20% SALE!! ALL PARTS
 Author: crimson30 View Messages Posted By crimson30
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 17:54
 Subject: Re: Tracking and order pulling accuracy
 Viewed: 58 times
 Topic: Selling
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I think some of the problem here is that very low expectations breed abuse.

I look at feedback for a seller and see a negative or two complaining about slowness
and think "well, I'm not in a hurry". Then I get the order and there are
multiple missing parts, wrong colors, really bad condition parts... the order
is fractally wrong and I have to wonder "why didn't these other buyers say
something?"
 Author: Sgt._MacSquinch View Messages Posted By Sgt._MacSquinch
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 17:41
 Subject: Tracking and order pulling accuracy
 Viewed: 170 times
 Topic: Selling
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I've probably placed 60+ orders over the last few months. I can say without
exaggeration that on at least 40% of those orders, there was no tracking number
provided. It's annoying enough when a seller can't be bothered to put
it where it belongs on the order form for the customer, but when I then go to
Paypal looking for one, and it isn't there, a simple annoyance becomes an
aggravation. Not providing tracking for customers shows an indifference to the
needs of the customer. That, and it's just plain lazy. There's also the
matter of sellers not bothering to check the merchandise for accuracy before
shipping. Twice in the last month I've had to deal with Batman figures, ordered
for a specific cape type, arriving with the wrong capes. Again, this is lazy.
Any kind of business that sells something has even the most basic quality control
practices in place. One can certainly tell the difference between pro sellers
who take what they do seriously, and the fly-by-night pop-up stores that are
just here to get the most bang for their bricks while they unload their unwanted
Lego. These lackluster sellers are contributing to an overall downturn, IMO,
in what should be a pleasurable buying experience, and frankly, I don't believe
the platform should continue to offer them the privilege, if they continue to
make customers unhappy. Go to Craig's List, place an ad in the paper, have
a rummage sale - whatever. Just take your bricks, your laziness, and your ineptitude
elsewhere.
 Author: leggodtshop View Messages Posted By leggodtshop
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 17:34
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 73 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, calebfishn writes:
  Profit is not harming the planet. Exploitation is.

Profit is exploitation. Profit means taking more than it has cost you. By definition
that is exploitation, consient deliberate exploitation. Letting someone else
pay more than it has cost you. On purpose. And getting away with it. We have
made it legal. Amazing.

  
There are command and control economies in various totalitarian states of the
world in which the profit motive is reduced. Are those economies less harmful
to the environment, or more harmful?

Is it better for a society to convert forests into charcoal to be used for cooking,
and thus pollute the atmosphere with carbon smoke, or for an enterprising person
to invest in developing cleaner forms of energy that benefit people and the environment
in exchange for a profit/return on her investment? People are not going to invest
the time and money needed to bring environment-saving technological improvements
without getting a return on their investment.

Without profit motive we are left with two alternatives: Coercion by the more
powerful to force the less powerful to "work" without profit, or a global return
to a hunter-gatherer society.

Which one of the two do you advocate?
 Author: popsicle View Messages Posted By popsicle
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 16:28
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, psusaxman2000 writes:
  I've only been part of this community for about 1.5 years and joined here
when I personally dove back into the LEGO community during the pandemic. I grew
up with Lego in my home and was always happy to have a new set (new to me personally)
for a holiday, birthday or whatever. As an adult now with a child, I'm
happy to be able to provide the same experiences for my daughter as she has grown
to love and enjoy a toy as much as I still do and we get to enjoy this hobby
together. What I've found recently is that there is a lot of animosity when
people tend to not get or find what they want. To me it sometimes feels like
a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you
want. Are there individuals that try to take advantage of the system, yes, always,
but the majority of the time, that's not the case.

I never joined this community with the intent of becoming a seller. I raided
my old collection that was still at my parents house trying to clean up space
and handing some down to my niece and nephew. In reviewing all these sets I
found that I had missing parts and that's when BL came into my life. From
there it was a matter of collecting the missing parts and reliving my childhood
over again. I found that I had extras and in collecting from some local yard
sales I just use BL to supplement my ability to purchase new sets for myself
and my daughter.

Over this time, I have similar interactions to the ones you've called out,
and at this point just come to realized that with any other social media type
thing, there are always both sides to each community and they will make themselves
loud and clear when they don't like something. To me it's just a byproduct
of the time and when they don't get what they want it will always come out.
Case and point is the BL Designer Program.

Enjoyable read. Thanks
 Author: popsicle View Messages Posted By popsicle
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 16:09
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, firestar246 writes:
  In Announce, patpendlego writes:

  
Yes, and that same profit is killing our planet. Because all profit eventually
is made on natural resoources taken from our planet at low or no cost at all,
harming nature, killing woods, animals, plants, etc.

Buiness may survice on profit, our planet is not.

Don't want to get into this hornets nest, but just want to point out that
every item you mentioned is a renewable resource and are being renewed. It doesn't
help out a lumber company if they destroy all the trees, as that would then end
their business pretty quickly. So the good companies will make sure they don't
just destroy, but rather harvest and replenish.

Well put.

Timberland, much of which is owned and managed by Indian tribes, have been historically
some of the healthiest forests we have in the Pacific Northwest, for us to enjoy.
Least prone to wildfires too.
 Author: popsicle View Messages Posted By popsicle
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 16:06
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, patpendlego writes:
  In Announce, firestar246 writes:
  In Announce, patpendlego writes:

  
Yes, and that same profit is killing our planet. Because all profit eventually
is made on natural resoources taken from our planet at low or no cost at all,
harming nature, killing woods, animals, plants, etc.

Buiness may survice on profit, our planet is not.

Don't want to get into this hornets nest, but just want to point out that
every item you mentioned is a renewable resource and are being renewed. It doesn't
help out a lumber company if they destroy all the trees,

But that is exactly what is happening! The rainforests are largly gone and NOT
renewable anymore, only and only for short term profit.

True. And a prime example of the havoc narrow-minded, short-term gain driven
men are able to reap. Unfortunately, there are plenty of other such examples
throughout our history. Which spotlights our primal nature when it's let
off the leash, not curtailed.

Profit per se, is not the boogie man in your example. It's human nature denied
and therefore unmanaged. IMHO
  
as that would then end
  their business pretty quickly. So the good companies will make sure they don't
just destroy, but rather harvest and replenish.

Every company must first make profit before they can renew what they used, and
no company has ever renewed ALL or even MORE than they destroyed. There is no
perpetual mobile.
 Author: zorbanj View Messages Posted By zorbanj
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:37
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, psusaxman2000 writes:
  To me it sometimes feels like a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you want.

But if you try sometimes, well, you might find you get what you need.

Sorry, I couldn't resist
 Author: waltzking View Messages Posted By waltzking
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:35
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, crimson30 writes:
  How are schools indoctrinating youth against capitalism?

Do you have any specific examples?

I could really get off topic here, but just try looking at the curriculum being
taught and compare it to that from 20-30 years ago. History events are changed
or omitted, key "fathers of communism" figures are now celebrated in countries
formerly known as capitalistic or free market. Couple with what students really
know (if you take the time to talk to any and dig for depth of knowledge in conversation)
and you'll find the vast differences in education in just the last few decades.

That's just the tip of the iceberg, but this forum isn't the place for
the topic beyond how it relates to our interactions now as sellers, buyers and
collectors from largely opposite economic world views. But is key IMO to understanding
why these vastly opposite and even angry interactions are occurring with consumers
faulting the profits of a reseller as immoral, when the original seller made
just as much if not more profit to start with. The lack of logic in such a view
is astounding.

Jonathan
 Author: calebfishn View Messages Posted By calebfishn
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:33
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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 Topic: Announce
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Profit is not harming the planet. Exploitation is.

There are command and control economies in various totalitarian states of the
world in which the profit motive is reduced. Are those economies less harmful
to the environment, or more harmful?

Is it better for a society to convert forests into charcoal to be used for cooking,
and thus pollute the atmosphere with carbon smoke, or for an enterprising person
to invest in developing cleaner forms of energy that benefit people and the environment
in exchange for a profit/return on her investment? People are not going to invest
the time and money needed to bring environment-saving technological improvements
without getting a return on their investment.

Without profit motive we are left with two alternatives: Coercion by the more
powerful to force the less powerful to "work" without profit, or a global return
to a hunter-gatherer society.

Which one of the two do you advocate?
 Author: leggodtshop View Messages Posted By leggodtshop
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:24
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 60 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, firestar246 writes:
  In Announce, patpendlego writes:

  
Yes, and that same profit is killing our planet. Because all profit eventually
is made on natural resoources taken from our planet at low or no cost at all,
harming nature, killing woods, animals, plants, etc.

Buiness may survice on profit, our planet is not.

Don't want to get into this hornets nest, but just want to point out that
every item you mentioned is a renewable resource and are being renewed. It doesn't
help out a lumber company if they destroy all the trees,

But that is exactly what is happening! The rainforests are largly gone and NOT
renewable anymore, only and only for short term profit.

as that would then end
  their business pretty quickly. So the good companies will make sure they don't
just destroy, but rather harvest and replenish.

Every company must first make profit before they can renew what they used, and
no company has ever renewed ALL or even MORE than they destroyed. There is no
perpetual mobile.
 Author: tons_of_bricks View Messages Posted By tons_of_bricks
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:17
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, patpendlego writes:

  
Yes, and that same profit is killing our planet. Because all profit eventually
is made on natural resoources taken from our planet at low or no cost at all,
harming nature, killing woods, animals, plants, etc.

Buiness may survice on profit, our planet is not.

Don't want to get into this hornets nest, but just want to point out that
every item you mentioned is a renewable resource and are being renewed. It doesn't
help out a lumber company if they destroy all the trees, as that would then end
their business pretty quickly. So the good companies will make sure they don't
just destroy, but rather harvest and replenish.
 Author: leggodtshop View Messages Posted By leggodtshop
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:06
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, firestar246 writes:
  In Announce, psusaxman2000 writes:

  
What I've found recently is that there is a lot of animosity when
people tend to not get or find what they want. To me it sometimes feels like
a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you
want.

That's the big issue right there, at least in my opinion.


People don't seem to understand the importance of profit anymore. They think
that if someone buys something to resell it at a higher value, that they are
cheaters, scammers, scalpers. They don't seem to understand that profit is
needed for a business to survive.

Yes, and that same profit is killing our planet. Because all profit eventually
is made on natural resoources taken from our planet at low or no cost at all,
harming nature, killing woods, animals, plants, etc.

Buiness may survice on profit, our planet is not.
 Author: tons_of_bricks View Messages Posted By tons_of_bricks
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:03
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, calebfishn writes:

  
Profit is not only needed for the survival of an individual business, it is essential
for making any type of consumer good dependably available and affordable. Just
think about Soviet Russia in the 1970's where people lined up for hours hoping
to find a loaf of bread and a bottle of vodka on the grocery store shelves. Without
incentive, people are not going to work at making consumer goods available and
affordable. Without the ability to profit from their work, Bricklink sellers
would not be spending hours sourcing, sorting, and listing parts for the AFOL
community to purchase. The variety of parts and sets available on Bricklink would
be much less and pricing would be variable and unpredictable.

For those who think that profit is immoral when it comes from selling toys, let's
all be thankful that Lego doesn't think that way, or we'd have no lego
at all.

This is what I like about (most) of the sellers here: they actually have a head
on their shoulders and a brain in it. You hit the nail on the head.
 Author: yorbrick View Messages Posted By yorbrick
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:01
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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.
  
I've seen one and only one instagram comment where I posted the price guide
image next to a rare figure part and someone commented "rip off".

Just because they see it as a toy and not a commodity doesn't mean they're
right.

Yeah. It's funny how lego is just a kids' toy when someone wants something
cheap, but it's a valuable collectable when it is in their hands.

If they want a palantir for their LOTR collection, they can buy a 20c Zamor sphere
in red and yellow instead of a black and lime one. It's just a toy, after
all.
 Author: tons_of_bricks View Messages Posted By tons_of_bricks
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 15:00
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, waltzking writes:

  
IMO its more so the anti-capitalist (or communist) teaching of youth that has
created the idea that profit is bad, and everyone deserves the same outcome...thus
anything they want they deserve to get, and anyone who gets more than they wanted
is (quote) "scalping scumbag."

I once even ran into a buyer on eBay who I had to give a basic lessen in economics
to after he "felt terrible" he sold something to be for more than he had paid.
When I enlightened him that likely everything in life he ever bought had the
seller making a profit (be it Amazon, Walmart or a private seller), it was
like a light bulb moment for him... I just don't get how he reached adulthood
not realizing this absolutely basic component of a free market? Seemingly schools
noways are not even teaching basic concepts, but rather indoctrinating youth
with who knows what instead!!!

Rant over, but I honestly think it all stems from a disconnect on the way the
last generation or two has been taught. Especially in well-to-do societies where
a large sum of the children have been pampered and treated like self-serving
royalty, rather than trainees facing graduated real-life challenges aiming to
help them become the leaders they need to be for the next generation. Global
warming won't wipe us out nearly as quick as such lack of knowledge and training
will.

Jonathan

I have to agree 110% with you here!
 Author: calebfishn View Messages Posted By calebfishn
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 14:54
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, firestar246 writes:
  In Announce, psusaxman2000 writes:

  
What I've found recently is that there is a lot of animosity when
people tend to not get or find what they want. To me it sometimes feels like
a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you
want.

That's the big issue right there, at least in my opinion.


People don't seem to understand the importance of profit anymore. They think
that if someone buys something to resell it at a higher value, that they are
cheaters, scammers, scalpers. They don't seem to understand that profit is
needed for a business to survive.

Profit is not only needed for the survival of an individual business, it is essential
for making any type of consumer good dependably available and affordable. Just
think about Soviet Russia in the 1970's where people lined up for hours hoping
to find a loaf of bread and a bottle of vodka on the grocery store shelves. Without
incentive, people are not going to work at making consumer goods available and
affordable. Without the ability to profit from their work, Bricklink sellers
would not be spending hours sourcing, sorting, and listing parts for the AFOL
community to purchase. The variety of parts and sets available on Bricklink would
be much less and pricing would be variable and unpredictable.

For those who think that profit is immoral when it comes from selling toys, let's
all be thankful that Lego doesn't think that way, or we'd have no lego
at all.
 Author: yorbrick View Messages Posted By yorbrick
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 14:50
 Subject: Re: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 34 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Dirkpeek writes:
  Hi all,

I have a small bricklink store where I sell stuff from my joblot buys that dont
interest me. It's mainly sets and figures.
I've had a couple of my friends and acquaintances ask if they could list
some of their sets. I said I'd be interested for a small percentage of the
final cost as I'll have to put time and effort into it. Has anyone done this
before? If so how did you work out payment etc? I'm not worried about payment
from my friends, it's the acquaintances I'd be sceptical about.

Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.

Minifigs are not so bad as they are quick to check. But sets, you need to make
sure every part is there in the correct colours. It is your reputation so you
need to do that. You should also have them on hand, so you can post them when/if
sold.

If you do it, insist on having the items in hand and you pay them when the items
sell.
 Author: waltzking View Messages Posted By waltzking
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 14:50
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  In Announce, musen2100 writes:
  In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

I am assuming you are also talking about older sets. For me after learning about
bricklink I have been able to get sets that I couldn't afford when I was
a small child. I can afford them now but without resellers I wouldn't be
able to buy them. Recently I have finally been able to obtain the 10143 UCS Death
Star II New for $550 by buying the parts. That is incredible. I also got the
6211 here for a bit over $150 (no minifigs, but new). Without any resellers this
would never have been possible, ignore the hate comments, you resellers are awesome
.

I get comments around everything new and old, rare and common, but the worst
ones usually relate to new sets that sell out quickly and people can't get
them at RRP and instead have to pay the initial inflated price when they get
relisted. I get this is annoying for people, and tbh not something I do, but
I still don't think the people doing it are really doing anything "wrong"
as it's a free market and people can buy what they like and try to resell
it for whatever they like.

IMO its more so the anti-capitalist (or communist) teaching of youth that has
created the idea that profit is bad, and everyone deserves the same outcome...thus
anything they want they deserve to get, and anyone who gets more than they wanted
is (quote) "scalping scumbag."

I once even ran into a buyer on eBay who I had to give a basic lessen in economics
to after he "felt terrible" he sold something to be for more than he had paid.
When I enlightened him that likely everything in life he ever bought had the
seller making a profit (be it Amazon, Walmart or a private seller), it was
like a light bulb moment for him... I just don't get how he reached adulthood
not realizing this absolutely basic component of a free market? Seemingly schools
noways are not even teaching basic concepts, but rather indoctrinating youth
with who knows what instead!!!

Rant over, but I honestly think it all stems from a disconnect on the way the
last generation or two has been taught. Especially in well-to-do societies where
a large sum of the children have been pampered and treated like self-serving
royalty, rather than trainees facing graduated real-life challenges aiming to
help them become the leaders they need to be for the next generation. Global
warming won't wipe us out nearly as quick as such lack of knowledge and training
will.

Jonathan
 Author: runner.caller View Messages Posted By runner.caller
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 14:39
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, crimson30 writes:
  Parting out sets clearly adds value to the Lego community. I'd much rather
pay $1 for a Sky Blue 2x4 plate than buy a $100+ set for it. If I had to buy
sets to get the parts for every MOC I wanted to make, it would be very cost prohibitive
and Lego would lose me as a consumer.

Maybe some people aren't considering MOC builders? I've seen a lot of
people who are tunnel-visioned into the paradigm of Lego only being about sets
and/or minifigs. With that sort of thinking, that value-added is marginalized.

As does bulk minfig listings.

If a seller undertakes the arduous task of ID'ing a ton of minifig components,
and then listing them or using them to complete figures, then they are getting
paid for that value added.

If I buy a used lot for $100, and everything sorted and combined and relisted
is worth $450, a collector who has more money than me, but less time is willing
to trade their money for certain figure(s) that they want, but don't have
time to hunt and compile themselves, then that is absolutely fair.

Try acquiring all of the Lord of The Rings figures now for a minifig collection
if resellers didn't exist.

I've seen one and only one instagram comment where I posted the price guide
image next to a rare figure part and someone commented "rip off".

Just because they see it as a toy and not a commodity doesn't mean they're
right.

I'd tell any negative peeps in regards to this to respectfully, pound sand.
 Author: mezoberenybrick View Messages Posted By mezoberenybrick
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 14:24
 Subject: -30% SALE OF PARTS!!
 Viewed: 43 times
 Topic: Sales
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-30% SALE OF PARTS!!
 Author: Fr0stByt3 View Messages Posted By Fr0stByt3
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:54
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

Recently bought a new copy of 1349 from Bricklink for roughly $170, which isn't
cheap but when you think about it, it's worth roughly what the set was worth
new. That's one set that hasn't really appreciated much in value but
most of the larger sets from the 2000s I've wanted appreciated a lot in value
and it's disappointing but understandable given how economics work.

Really can't say market manipulation is a problem on BL. If it is, it's
not noticeable compared to the stunts pulled frequently on Amazon and eBay where
the sellers think they've got gold and there are quite a lot of people out
there that give in and buy those sets because they often times don't know
sites like this exist.

Going back to set 1349, I'm glad I jumped on it because on eBay or Amazon
sellers were wanting $300+ from what I saw so it was a matter of time before
someone purchased it just to flip on another site for a profit. So not so much
a problem here as it is elsewhere and most of the sellers here shouldn't
be getting the flack.

Seller was nice and I'll enjoy using the set.
 Author: Stuart9 View Messages Posted By Stuart9
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:47
 Subject: Re: Mega Bloks
 Viewed: 72 times
 Topic: General
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Too true, Hilary Page didn’t seem to see the full potential of the self locking
bricks.






In General, runner.caller writes:
  In General, Drevil44 writes:
  In General, bearly30 writes:
  This site is amazing!! I used the inventory area to put all my nephews sets back
together, as the legos were just a total mess. I was wondering if anyone knows
of a site in which to find instructions or the brick inventory of Mega Bloks.
I am trying to sort the pieces to find them all for the set. It is an older set
. It is called Mega Bloks Build A Bakery. Contacted the company but that information
is unavailable as the set is a few years old. Thanks a bunch!!

I can't believe that Mega Bloks has never been sued out of existence by Lego
for copyright infringement of their design/product. I can't tell you the
countless hours I have spent separating non-Lego from genuine Lego parts only
to dump these fraudulent pieces into the garbage. Family members who give these
Mega Blok sets to their children/grandchildren/nieces/nephews etc., are proliferating
a continual crime in my opinion. These inferior products may at the onset look
like they can be combined with the Lego system of bricks, but in actuality ruin
the building experience that that child might have otherwise enjoyed if using
pure Lego only.

LOL! the non-lego brands are super annoying when sorting bulk.

However, don't forget that LEGO was once a clone brick brand as well copying
kiddicraft. So if kiddicraft had sued lego out of existence in 1949, what you're
suggesting lego do to mega-bloks now, then lego wouldn't exist today.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFELcl75CiY

I had a terrible experience with a mega-bloks monster truck as a little kid.
I was never able to put it all the way together bc the tolerances were so bad
that pushing a piece in would pop one off somewhere else.

I'm guessing uninitiated gift buyers think they are getting more bang for
their buck, but I'd rather have had a modest $20 lego set back then than
a giant $20 cheap monster truck.

I will say that the halo figures they make are actually pretty cool and they
have some resell value as well which helps fund more lego purchases.
 Author: cejorion View Messages Posted By cejorion
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:44
 Subject: 15% off for the rest of July
 Viewed: 38 times
 Topic: Sales
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15% parts off for the rest of July! (excludes sets and minifigs)

Free shipping on orders $25+ (to USA only)


I'm moving and need to downsize my inventory. Thanks and have an awesome
day!
 Author: AngrySquirrel View Messages Posted By AngrySquirrel
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:27
 Subject: Re: Just Opened in Bangalore, India!
 Viewed: 33 times
 Topic: New Stores
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In New Stores, ProVijay writes:
  Hello,

I'm so excited to finally be a seller in Bricklink. We opened our store
(Bangalore Bricks) a month back and so far it has been a slow but steady progress.
We have shipped 3 international and 1 domestic orders. We primarily are selling
parts. Minifigures and some retired sets too we have got but just about a dozen
there. Excited to see what the future holds for us!

Thank you for all the support. Cheers!

Congrats!
 Author: runner.caller View Messages Posted By runner.caller
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:12
 Subject: Re: Mega Bloks
 Viewed: 74 times
 Topic: General
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In General, Drevil44 writes:
  In General, bearly30 writes:
  This site is amazing!! I used the inventory area to put all my nephews sets back
together, as the legos were just a total mess. I was wondering if anyone knows
of a site in which to find instructions or the brick inventory of Mega Bloks.
I am trying to sort the pieces to find them all for the set. It is an older set
. It is called Mega Bloks Build A Bakery. Contacted the company but that information
is unavailable as the set is a few years old. Thanks a bunch!!

I can't believe that Mega Bloks has never been sued out of existence by Lego
for copyright infringement of their design/product. I can't tell you the
countless hours I have spent separating non-Lego from genuine Lego parts only
to dump these fraudulent pieces into the garbage. Family members who give these
Mega Blok sets to their children/grandchildren/nieces/nephews etc., are proliferating
a continual crime in my opinion. These inferior products may at the onset look
like they can be combined with the Lego system of bricks, but in actuality ruin
the building experience that that child might have otherwise enjoyed if using
pure Lego only.

LOL! the non-lego brands are super annoying when sorting bulk.

However, don't forget that LEGO was once a clone brick brand as well copying
kiddicraft. So if kiddicraft had sued lego out of existence in 1949, what you're
suggesting lego do to mega-bloks now, then lego wouldn't exist today.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFELcl75CiY

I had a terrible experience with a mega-bloks monster truck as a little kid.
I was never able to put it all the way together bc the tolerances were so bad
that pushing a piece in would pop one off somewhere else.

I'm guessing uninitiated gift buyers think they are getting more bang for
their buck, but I'd rather have had a modest $20 lego set back then than
a giant $20 cheap monster truck.

I will say that the halo figures they make are actually pretty cool and they
have some resell value as well which helps fund more lego purchases.
 Author: Tracyd View Messages Posted By Tracyd
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:00
 Subject: Re: Mega Bloks
 Viewed: 67 times
 Topic: General
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In General, Drevil44 writes:
  In General, bearly30 writes:
  This site is amazing!! I used the inventory area to put all my nephews sets back
together, as the legos were just a total mess. I was wondering if anyone knows
of a site in which to find instructions or the brick inventory of Mega Bloks.
I am trying to sort the pieces to find them all for the set. It is an older set
. It is called Mega Bloks Build A Bakery. Contacted the company but that information
is unavailable as the set is a few years old. Thanks a bunch!!

I can't believe that Mega Bloks has never been sued out of existence by Lego
for copyright infringement of their design/product. I can't tell you the
countless hours I have spent separating non-Lego from genuine Lego parts only
to dump these fraudulent pieces into the garbage. Family members who give these
Mega Blok sets to their children/grandchildren/nieces/nephews etc., are proliferating
a continual crime in my opinion. These inferior products may at the onset look
like they can be combined with the Lego system of bricks, but in actuality ruin
the building experience that that child might have otherwise enjoyed if using
pure Lego only.

They tried.
 Author: Dirkpeek View Messages Posted By Dirkpeek
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 13:00
 Subject: Re: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 29 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Dirkpeek writes:
  Hi all,

I have a small bricklink store where I sell stuff from my joblot buys that dont
interest me. It's mainly sets and figures.
I've had a couple of my friends and acquaintances ask if they could list
some of their sets. I said I'd be interested for a small percentage of the
final cost as I'll have to put time and effort into it. Has anyone done this
before? If so how did you work out payment etc? I'm not worried about payment
from my friends, it's the acquaintances I'd be sceptical about.

Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.


Thanks for the help,

I think ye are right, there is to many variables that can go wrong.
I'll offer them a fair price and list them myself if they take it.


Thanks!
 Author: Drevil44 View Messages Posted By Drevil44
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:52
 Subject: Re: Mega Bloks
 Viewed: 74 times
 Topic: General
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In General, bearly30 writes:
  This site is amazing!! I used the inventory area to put all my nephews sets back
together, as the legos were just a total mess. I was wondering if anyone knows
of a site in which to find instructions or the brick inventory of Mega Bloks.
I am trying to sort the pieces to find them all for the set. It is an older set
. It is called Mega Bloks Build A Bakery. Contacted the company but that information
is unavailable as the set is a few years old. Thanks a bunch!!

I can't believe that Mega Bloks has never been sued out of existence by Lego
for copyright infringement of their design/product. I can't tell you the
countless hours I have spent separating non-Lego from genuine Lego parts only
to dump these fraudulent pieces into the garbage. Family members who give these
Mega Blok sets to their children/grandchildren/nieces/nephews etc., are proliferating
a continual crime in my opinion. These inferior products may at the onset look
like they can be combined with the Lego system of bricks, but in actuality ruin
the building experience that that child might have otherwise enjoyed if using
pure Lego only.
 Author: StickyBrickit View Messages Posted By StickyBrickit
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:47
 Subject: Re: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 21 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Dirkpeek writes:
  Hi all,

I have a small bricklink store where I sell stuff from my joblot buys that dont
interest me. It's mainly sets and figures.
I've had a couple of my friends and acquaintances ask if they could list
some of their sets. I said I'd be interested for a small percentage of the
final cost as I'll have to put time and effort into it. Has anyone done this
before? If so how did you work out payment etc? I'm not worried about payment
from my friends, it's the acquaintances I'd be sceptical about.

Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.

Given how many things you need to account for and how many things can (and will)
go wrong, I wouldn't bother. As already stated, better option is to buy the
sets yourself and then deal with it all yourself so you get to keep the profit.
 Author: tons_of_bricks View Messages Posted By tons_of_bricks
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:45
 Subject: Re: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 23 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Drevil44 writes:

  
  
Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.

In my personal life experiences I have never found your good intentions to be
worth the hassle and potential conflicts over petty matters that may arise from
that sort of arrangement. I believe it is always better to offer a fair purchase
price from your friends/family and just make the goods your own inventory and
yours to do with as you may please. Saves many headaches, pointless calculations
and tracking of what belongs to whom, etc.

Yep. Just buy the items from your friends/family then sell them as your own.
 Author: Drevil44 View Messages Posted By Drevil44
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:38
 Subject: Re: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 32 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Dirkpeek writes:
  Hi all,

I have a small bricklink store where I sell stuff from my joblot buys that dont
interest me. It's mainly sets and figures.
I've had a couple of my friends and acquaintances ask if they could list
some of their sets. I said I'd be interested for a small percentage of the
final cost as I'll have to put time and effort into it. Has anyone done this
before? If so how did you work out payment etc? I'm not worried about payment
from my friends, it's the acquaintances I'd be sceptical about.

Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.

In my personal life experiences I have never found your good intentions to be
worth the hassle and potential conflicts over petty matters that may arise from
that sort of arrangement. I believe it is always better to offer a fair purchase
price from your friends/family and just make the goods your own inventory and
yours to do with as you may please. Saves many headaches, pointless calculations
and tracking of what belongs to whom, etc.
 Author: ProVijay View Messages Posted By ProVijay
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:33
 Subject: Just Opened in Bangalore, India!
 Viewed: 64 times
 Topic: New Stores
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Hello,

I'm so excited to finally be a seller in Bricklink. We opened our store
(Bangalore Bricks) a month back and so far it has been a slow but steady progress.
We have shipped 3 international and 1 domestic orders. We primarily are selling
parts. Minifigures and some retired sets too we have got but just about a dozen
there. Excited to see what the future holds for us!

Thank you for all the support. Cheers!
 
 Author: tonnic View Messages Posted By tonnic
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:30
 Subject: Re: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 31 times
 Topic: Selling
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In Selling, Dirkpeek writes:
  Hi all,

I have a small bricklink store where I sell stuff from my joblot buys that dont
interest me. It's mainly sets and figures.
I've had a couple of my friends and acquaintances ask if they could list
some of their sets. I said I'd be interested for a small percentage of the
final cost as I'll have to put time and effort into it. Has anyone done this
before? If so how did you work out payment etc? I'm not worried about payment
from my friends, it's the acquaintances I'd be sceptical about.

Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.

Hi Hendrik,

It is a difficult one, of course you want to help friends and family but there
are some things to think about.

A few parts or minifigs I would say yes, it is fine. Easy to check if not too
much parts etc.
A set might be a different thing, you are responsible for the completeness and
the condition if you sell it.
Do you rely on your friends to really be sure if a set is complete, has all the
right colors (a lot of people do not care for light bluish grey or older light
grey, you need to care about this) and all the right variations of parts.
Your friends need to have more than average knowledge about Lego.
If you want to check all sets by yourself it is quite some work and if you only
get a small percentage what is in it for you?
This means checking the sets, the parts, put them in your inventory, store them
in your house so you can access them if you have a question or need to ship them
a.s.a.p., you need to pack (materials costs some amount) and ship them, pay the
fees for Paypal etc.
All these things need to be ‘included’ in your small percentage.
To control all steps you need to take care of it yourself.

A buyer needs to pay you so you know it is paid for, know what fees are taken
of your revenue.
The next step is to take your percentage.

And what to do if the set arrives damaged or not at all?
Who pays the refund for sets, shippingcosts etc.?

After all, a buyer sees you as the owner of the set and holds you responsible.
 Author: StickyBrickit View Messages Posted By StickyBrickit
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:13
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 75 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, musen2100 writes:
  In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

I am assuming you are also talking about older sets. For me after learning about
bricklink I have been able to get sets that I couldn't afford when I was
a small child. I can afford them now but without resellers I wouldn't be
able to buy them. Recently I have finally been able to obtain the 10143 UCS Death
Star II New for $550 by buying the parts. That is incredible. I also got the
6211 here for a bit over $150 (no minifigs, but new). Without any resellers this
would never have been possible, ignore the hate comments, you resellers are awesome
.

I get comments around everything new and old, rare and common, but the worst
ones usually relate to new sets that sell out quickly and people can't get
them at RRP and instead have to pay the initial inflated price when they get
relisted. I get this is annoying for people, and tbh not something I do, but
I still don't think the people doing it are really doing anything "wrong"
as it's a free market and people can buy what they like and try to resell
it for whatever they like.
 Author: Dirkpeek View Messages Posted By Dirkpeek
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 12:08
 Subject: Co-op type store.
 Viewed: 131 times
 Topic: Selling
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Hi all,

I have a small bricklink store where I sell stuff from my joblot buys that dont
interest me. It's mainly sets and figures.
I've had a couple of my friends and acquaintances ask if they could list
some of their sets. I said I'd be interested for a small percentage of the
final cost as I'll have to put time and effort into it. Has anyone done this
before? If so how did you work out payment etc? I'm not worried about payment
from my friends, it's the acquaintances I'd be sceptical about.

Is it worth it or am I open to a world of pain?

Any help is appreciated
Hendrik.
 Author: psusaxman2000 View Messages Posted By psusaxman2000
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:44
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 71 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, firestar246 writes:
  In Announce, psusaxman2000 writes:

  
What I've found recently is that there is a lot of animosity when
people tend to not get or find what they want. To me it sometimes feels like
a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you
want.

That's the big issue right there, at least in my opinion.


People don't seem to understand the importance of profit anymore. They think
that if someone buys something to resell it at a higher value, that they are
cheaters, scammers, scalpers. They don't seem to understand that profit is
needed for a business to survive.

Agreed. And that profit has different layers as well. Some only us it to reinvest
(myself) and some use it for business and lively hood. There will always be
a small margin of individuals that try to take advantage of any system, time,
pandemic, crisis or whatever. Look at what happened to toilet paper, masks and
hand sanitizer just a year ago. You'll never be able to weed them all out,
but you can't just blame an entire community for the actions of a few.
 Author: Stuart9 View Messages Posted By Stuart9
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:42
 Subject: Re: Mega Bloks
 Viewed: 72 times
 Topic: General
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No equivalent site but your best bet might be :




https://bloksforum.freeforums.net/







In General, bearly30 writes:
  This site is amazing!! I used the inventory area to put all my nephews sets back
together, as the legos were just a total mess. I was wondering if anyone knows
of a site in which to find instructions or the brick inventory of Mega Bloks.
I am trying to sort the pieces to find them all for the set. It is an older set
. It is called Mega Bloks Build A Bakery. Contacted the company but that information
is unavailable as the set is a few years old. Thanks a bunch!!
 Author: musen2100 View Messages Posted By musen2100
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:39
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 73 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

I am assuming you are also talking about older sets. For me after learning about
bricklink I have been able to get sets that I couldn't afford when I was
a small child. I can afford them now but without resellers I wouldn't be
able to buy them. Recently I have finally been able to obtain the 10143 UCS Death
Star II New for $550 by buying the parts. That is incredible. I also got the
6211 here for a bit over $150 (no minifigs, but new). Without any resellers this
would never have been possible, ignore the hate comments, you resellers are awesome
.
 Author: bearly30 View Messages Posted By bearly30
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:24
 Subject: Mega Bloks
 Viewed: 203 times
 Topic: General
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This site is amazing!! I used the inventory area to put all my nephews sets back
together, as the legos were just a total mess. I was wondering if anyone knows
of a site in which to find instructions or the brick inventory of Mega Bloks.
I am trying to sort the pieces to find them all for the set. It is an older set
. It is called Mega Bloks Build A Bakery. Contacted the company but that information
is unavailable as the set is a few years old. Thanks a bunch!!
 Author: tons_of_bricks View Messages Posted By tons_of_bricks
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:20
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 81 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, psusaxman2000 writes:

  
What I've found recently is that there is a lot of animosity when
people tend to not get or find what they want. To me it sometimes feels like
a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you
want.

That's the big issue right there, at least in my opinion.


People don't seem to understand the importance of profit anymore. They think
that if someone buys something to resell it at a higher value, that they are
cheaters, scammers, scalpers. They don't seem to understand that profit is
needed for a business to survive.
 Author: yorbrick View Messages Posted By yorbrick
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:20
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

For normal, retail sets I think people with that negative mindset are wrong.
I don't think anyone has ever missed out on being able to buy a regular retail
set because of resellers. If anything, resellers have allowed people to buy new
and sealed sets way past when LEGO or the retailer wanted them gone from shelves.
Of course, some people may have missed some very good deals when things go to
clearance but that is life. They would probably have missed them anyway just
to a different kid or family instead of a reseller. But if they waited until
it had a significant discount, then they probably didn't want it that much.

Of course limited sets are a different matter. Whether they are BDP, or comic
con sets, or regional and/or store exclusives. When more people want them than
are made available they become a commodity from day one.

I think the simple answer is that if people do not like resellers, then they
make the decision never buy LEGO from a reseller, instead only from LEGO directly
or from a retailer. If they miss out, they miss out. As soon as they buy from
the secondary market, they are just as much responsible as the resellers.
 Author: popsicle View Messages Posted By popsicle
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:16
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 99 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

Just wear the reseller label proudly. Buying n'selling is what makes retail
and wholesale markets vibrant and strong.

Comments directed at you from ideologues of any stripe, should be taken with
some skepticism. Give more weight to the pragmatist's comments instead.

-popsicle
 Author: jbo210 View Messages Posted By jbo210
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:11
 Subject: Re: BL Store Social Media?
 Viewed: 27 times
 Topic: Selling
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That is awesome! Yea, I have definitely learned that social media actually takes
a lot of effort to manage!

Best of luck with your store! Followed you back!
 Author: psusaxman2000 View Messages Posted By psusaxman2000
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 11:08
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 102 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  I'm part of several non-BL Lego groups such as some of the FaceBook AFOL
groups plus some groups that are local to me (in the UK). I've noticed that
there is a range of opinions on people who sell / resell Lego and that (strangely,
IMO) some opinions can be vehemently negative. This can range from the odd comment
about how resellers are missing the "point" of Lego (i.e. it's a toy, it
shouldn't be resold for profit) to some downright nasty comments about me
being a "scalping scumbag" and that I'm "ruining the hobby, driving up prices,
taking food out of children's mouths" etc (not kidding about that last one!)

Tbh I'm never that bothered about any negativity as I'm sure you get
it everywhere, but I do think it's strange in that I guess people just misunderstand
how the market works. I can only set my own prices and not the general market
value, so if I overprice my Lego it won't sell, and if I underprice it then
I wouldn't make any money so there would be less Lego available (as I'd
be out of the market).

I guess Lego does retain it's value well when resold so maybe people are
angry about this, but I don't know of any resellers that are raking it in
at other people's expenses. In fact for the hours we put in I'd say we
generally don't get paid all that well. Especially when I put in extra time
for customer service (making sure we're good/very good at all aspects of
what we do, it takes extra time for which we don't actually get paid).

Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

I've only been part of this community for about 1.5 years and joined here
when I personally dove back into the LEGO community during the pandemic. I grew
up with Lego in my home and was always happy to have a new set (new to me personally)
for a holiday, birthday or whatever. As an adult now with a child, I'm
happy to be able to provide the same experiences for my daughter as she has grown
to love and enjoy a toy as much as I still do and we get to enjoy this hobby
together. What I've found recently is that there is a lot of animosity when
people tend to not get or find what they want. To me it sometimes feels like
a sense of entitlement and not realizing that you can't always get what you
want. Are there individuals that try to take advantage of the system, yes, always,
but the majority of the time, that's not the case.

I never joined this community with the intent of becoming a seller. I raided
my old collection that was still at my parents house trying to clean up space
and handing some down to my niece and nephew. In reviewing all these sets I
found that I had missing parts and that's when BL came into my life. From
there it was a matter of collecting the missing parts and reliving my childhood
over again. I found that I had extras and in collecting from some local yard
sales I just use BL to supplement my ability to purchase new sets for myself
and my daughter.

Over this time, I have similar interactions to the ones you've called out,
and at this point just come to realized that with any other social media type
thing, there are always both sides to each community and they will make themselves
loud and clear when they don't like something. To me it's just a byproduct
of the time and when they don't get what they want it will always come out.
Case and point is the BL Designer Program.
 Author: brickstand View Messages Posted By brickstand
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 10:52
 Subject: Part out 10x 31120 Medieval Castle
 Viewed: 73 times
 Topic: Announce
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Dear all!

I'd like to inform you, that we just started Parting out 10x 31120 Medieval
Castle.

Don't forget the 50% discount on shipping price if you order is over 100
EUR and if it weighs under 1700 grams and If you choose Packagesender (EU) or
DHL (other countries).
Discount is not valid for Slovenia post and for sets.

Thank you!
Greetings from Slovenia.
Gregor

PS. If you'd like to be informed which set we just Parted out or which parts
are for sale in our store, what kind of discounts we're offering at the moment
and if we're having any prize game, please follow us on:
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brickstandstore or
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickstandstore
 
 Author: Piannohands View Messages Posted By Piannohands
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 10:51
 Subject: Happy Milk Chocolate Day!
 Viewed: 446 times
 Topic: Sales
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All brown parts 40% off.
(all green parts are still 30% off from yesterday)
 Author: popsicle View Messages Posted By popsicle
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 10:51
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 90 times
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In Announce, cosmicray writes:
  In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

There are a significant number of reasons, for the situation we are in, and it
isn't a simple story. I've been around for ~22 years, and it is a business
I never planned or expected to be involved with. It just happened.

The story goes back to 1999. I had been doing IT (which was better described
as a systems analyst / code monkey) for ~25 years, and I burned out. When I was
growing up, there was no LEGO in my house. I have a tube of ELGO blocks and Lincoln
logs, and that was about it. I decided the time had arrived that I wanted to
build a LEGO set, and the one I wanted was 8480-1 (the big Technic Space Shuttle).
The store I expected to have it in stock, the nearest TRU, was sold out. But
they looked on the computer and said another store, 90 miles up the Interstate
showed they had one. So I drove up to that store ... they had two ... on clearance
! The manager told me if I bought both, he would improve the clearance price.
So I bought them, and it's been a long journey I never expected.

Over the next 10 years, I discovered every retailer that sold LEGO, within a
200-250 mile radius. I learned which stores it sold well, and which ones almost
always ended up with stock they had to clearance. Some of the deals were exceptionally
good. Then, around 2009/2010, the deals began to vanish. by that point I had
accumulated a significant inventory. Lest anyone think I was sitting behind a
keyboard doing this, nothing of the kind. There were days I left at 7 AM, watching
the moon setting in one direction, and got home at 2 AM, after watching the moon
rise on the other side. Some very long days, with lots of miles driven. The toys
were sitting in all those stores, just waiting for anyone to walk in and buy
them. There were even a few instances, where the stores had so much to move,
they still had product back in the stock room, still in original packing boxes.
They were all happy to see it sold. Probably less than 1% of the inventory I
ever obtained came thru the internet.

What happened in 2009/2010 had to do with the US housing collapse. People who
had been flipping houses (and watched that come to an abrupt halt), many moved
into flipping LEGO. Those people were buying clearance LEGO at lesser markdowns
(that I had been ignoring). Then various LEGO movies came out. Each LEGO, Star
Wars, or Harry Potter, movie caused demand for associated LEGO themed sets. The
flippers saw that they could command higher prices, and eventually they began
buying certain sets at (or close to) MSRP, purely for price appreciation. I never
did that. I used to cruise various TRU stores, staring at the overstock shelves
(up high). When I spotted something that should have been clearanced, I asked
an associate to get a ladder and check it. They were used to me, and knew I was
a good customer, and besides I was helping them do inventory control (they they
were not doing). I snagged a few real deals that way.

As we moved thru the 2010s, I noticed something new ... that customers were (occasionally)
desperate for a specific item, and price was not an issue. I also began running
into drop-shippers, who were listing my inventory, and expecting me to fulfill
their orders. I watched Amazon grow, sold a little there, and decided it wasn't
my cup of tea.

What I have learned, is that LEGO had poor channel control (back in the beginning).
Over the years, they learned how to manage their channel much better. I also
watched various retailers (K-mart, TRU, KB Toys, etc) roll over and give up.
Retail is a tricky business. If you don't execute well, might as well close
the doors. The internet, and more recently the pandemic, has changed everything
about selling LEGO.

Peace.

Nita Rae

Good read. Thanks
 Author: cosmicray View Messages Posted By cosmicray
 Posted: Jul 28, 2021 10:33
 Subject: Re: Lego Resellers vs. The AFOL Community
 Viewed: 132 times
 Topic: Announce
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In Announce, StickyBrickit writes:
  Just wondering if anyone else has come across this sort of negativity and accusation
that we're all driving up prices and making Lego unaffordable for most people
(I'd actually argue the opposite is the case as we provide an alternative
to buying from Lego themselves who would basically have a monopoly if resellers
didn't exist!)

There are a significant number of reasons, for the situation we are in, and it
isn't a simple story. I've been around for ~22 years, and it is a business
I never planned or expected to be involved with. It just happened.

The story goes back to 1999. I had been doing IT (which was better described
as a systems analyst / code monkey) for ~25 years, and I burned out. When I was
growing up, there was no LEGO in my house. I have a tube of ELGO blocks and Lincoln
logs, and that was about it. I decided the time had arrived that I wanted to
build a LEGO set, and the one I wanted was 8480-1 (the big Technic Space Shuttle).
The store I expected to have it in stock, the nearest TRU, was sold out. But
they looked on the computer and said another store, 90 miles up the Interstate
showed they had one. So I drove up to that store ... they had two ... on clearance
! The manager told me if I bought both, he would improve the clearance price.
So I bought them, and it's been a long journey I never expected.

Over the next 10 years, I discovered every retailer that sold LEGO, within a
200-250 mile radius. I learned which stores it sold well, and which ones almost
always ended up with stock they had to clearance. Some of the deals were exceptionally
good. Then, around 2009/2010, the deals began to vanish. by that point I had
accumulated a significant inventory. Lest anyone think I was sitting behind a
keyboard doing this, nothing of the kind. There were days I left at 7 AM, watching
the moon setting in one direction, and got home at 2 AM, after watching the moon
rise on the other side. Some very long days, with lots of miles driven. The toys
were sitting in all those stores, just waiting for anyone to walk in and buy
them. There were even a few instances, where the stores had so much to move,
they still had product back in the stock room, still in original packing boxes.
They were all happy to see it sold. Probably less than 1% of the inventory I
ever obtained came thru the internet.

What happened in 2009/2010 had to do with the US housing collapse. People who
had been flipping houses (and watched that come to an abrupt halt), many moved
into flipping LEGO. Those people were buying clearance LEGO at lesser markdowns
(that I had been ignoring). Then various LEGO movies came out. Each LEGO, Star
Wars, or Harry Potter, movie caused demand for associated LEGO themed sets. The
flippers saw that they could command higher prices, and eventually they began
buying certain sets at (or close to) MSRP, purely for price appreciation. I never
did that. I used to cruise various TRU stores, staring at the overstock shelves
(up high). When I spotted something that should have been clearanced, I asked
an associate to get a ladder and check it. They were used to me, and knew I was
a good customer, and besides I was helping them do inventory control (they they
were not doing). I snagged a few real deals that way.

As we moved thru the 2010s, I noticed something new ... that customers were (occasionally)
desperate for a specific item, and price was not an issue. I also began running
into drop-shippers, who were listing my inventory, and expecting me to fulfill
their orders. I watched Amazon grow, sold a little there, and decided it wasn't
my cup of tea.

What I have learned, is that LEGO had poor channel control (back in the beginning).
Over the years, they learned how to manage their channel much better. I also
watched various retailers (K-mart, TRU, KB Toys, etc) roll over and give up.
Retail is a tricky business. If you don't execute well, might as well close
the doors. The internet, and more recently the pandemic, has changed everything
about selling LEGO.

Peace.

Nita Rae

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