If you weren’t aware, ‘reselling’ at it’s very basic level is selling something for more than you bought it for. So by that token, I started reselling stuff at a very young age. My mom would take me to work with her at the restaurant, and when I was really bored I’d ask the guys in the kitchen if they wanted me to get them anything from the 7-11 down the street - they’d give me money and I’d *always* take a delivery fee. I knew a burrito was $1.79, but I’d charge $3. Now, this wasn’t technically reselling, but I noticed that - even at 10 years old - I was able to put a mark-up on certain items for convenience's sake. So I’d collect $20 or so from the group and I’d come back with probably $11 worth of junk food (frozen burritos, drinks, candy). Which was great for me at the time. I made a lot of cash just pulling 20-minute food runs. And everyone was happy.
(2/6) The secret to reselling.
(2/6) The secret to reselling.
(2/6) The secret to reselling.
If you weren’t aware, ‘reselling’ at it’s very basic level is selling something for more than you bought it for. So by that token, I started reselling stuff at a very young age. My mom would take me to work with her at the restaurant, and when I was really bored I’d ask the guys in the kitchen if they wanted me to get them anything from the 7-11 down the street - they’d give me money and I’d *always* take a delivery fee. I knew a burrito was $1.79, but I’d charge $3. Now, this wasn’t technically reselling, but I noticed that - even at 10 years old - I was able to put a mark-up on certain items for convenience's sake. So I’d collect $20 or so from the group and I’d come back with probably $11 worth of junk food (frozen burritos, drinks, candy). Which was great for me at the time. I made a lot of cash just pulling 20-minute food runs. And everyone was happy.