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Adventures With a Book Lover


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YARD SALE 103: Pleasing Your Patrons

My gorgeous tulips

Welcome to YARD SALE 103: Pleasing Your Patrons, the third installment of my YARD SALE series.

Plans were to have this post complete and ready to go yesterday morning. And then computer chaos ensued. Instead I spent all day in support chat rooms and on the phone trying to recalibrate this technological piece of machinery. (I know, you thought I was going to say something else nasty. I had those moments yesterday, filled completely with frustration. Today I am much calmer, as most of the issues have been resolved.)

Back to YARD SALE 103: Pleasing Your Patrons.

There are two parties that must be happy at the end of the yard sale day.

1. Yourself – including your spouse, children, pets, and neighbors.

2. Your patrons – those shoppers who come to take away your stuff (and pay you while they are doing so).

Happily ever after is the true goal here, for all involved.

We were happy and elated with the ease and success of our sale. Exhausted? Yes. But it was a good tired. Check off number 1.

One of the main things we did at our yard sale was to keep it simple. Simple organization, simple pricing, simple transactions. Shoot, we even helped cart junk, I mean purchases, out to vehicles. We meaning my husband.

Cheap prices, lots of choices, easy layout, and great access were the strategies we used. Not sure about parking, which looked a bit dodgy at times, but we did the best with what we had.

Happy customers? I’m pleased to say, there were many. Here are a few examples of pleased patrons.

My favorite was a young lady (in her twenties) who found our ginger pot lamp delightful. It was missing a shade, but still worked. We were just done with it. I told her the story of how we’ve had it almost as long as we’ve been married, nearly 30 years. She was so excited to have a lamp AND a story. Kind of makes me want it back. No. Not really.

Another glad shopper was a middle grade boy who discovered the microscope set. He was so pleased, he stood there opening and taking out all of the items on the cash register table. This did create somewhat of a mess and nuisance for others trying to pay and leave, but no one was put out. This young man just couldn’t wait to get home and start playing.

Our neighbor across the street was overjoyed to capitalize on our yard sale traffic. He put out a refrigerator. It was sold before we even knew it was available. See? The neighbors were involved and did a little side business of their own.

Two middle-aged women came both days. Friday, they paid the usual, though cheap, prices and filled several bags of new belongings. The ladies returned on Saturday and gathered even more with our reduced-to-move prices. Both were very happy as they regularly shopped yard sales to find supplies and necessities for shelters and ministries they helped.

There was a ton of Christmas stuff. I was very surprised to see several different shoppers gravitate and select Christmas goods. Guess what I said as they left? Merry Christmas!

Pleased and happy customers? Yes. Check off number 2.

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And so we come to the end of yard sale mania. My hope is that you will be encouraged to simplify the experience. It will still be hard work, but oh, so much easier and more satisfying. Plus you will make some extra cash. No one can argue with that.

See previous posts YARD SALE 101: Ways to Avoid the “Y” Word and YARD SALE 102:Tips for Yard Sale Success (If You Must Have One) for more details about yard sales at http://www.angiequantrell.blogspot.com.

Thanks for reading and double thanks for sharing.


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Now You’re Just Some Bunny That I Used To Know

Now You’re Just Some Bunny That I Used To Know.


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I’m Hooked on a Feeling

LOL. Love it! Singing in my head, great movie pix that tie in. Thanks!

D. Parker's avataryadadarcyyada

1blog15I can’t fight this feeling, deep inside of me, I’m hooked on a feeling…blogging, you don’t know what you do to me.

I don’t know how many blogging advice posts I’ve read in the past couple of years – some were helpful, others decidedly unhelpful, others gibberish. So here’s my best blogging advice that will change the way you blog forever!

1. Have a blog.

2.Write 300 words to whatever-your-readers-think-isn’t-too-long posts. Think of each post as a summer hat, you want it to cover your face and neck, but you don’t want to be the one with thatRoyal Wedding hat.1blog21
3. Put pictures in the posts. Take, make, find, paint, draw…and credit them, if possible.

4.Publish the post – this part is way more important than it seems.

1blog18

5.Read. Not just books, but other people’s posts. If you don’t have time to read, how do…

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How to add Widgets to your blog.

Love the extra tech help. Thanks!

Ronovan's avatarronovanwrites

All links open in this window.

Recently I published a How To article and in closing I mentioned if anyone had a How To they would like to see to let me know through the Comment Form on the About page. I got a request.

Widgets in the Sidebar, how?

Depending on the Widget this can be very simple, or a little less simple, but overall not that difficult.

I will show how to add four types of Widgets. If you don’t know how to get to where you select the kind of Widget you like in your Dashboard, make certain to keep reading before jumping to a certain section. The below links take you to sections of this article.

Let’s get…

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Radio Interviews for authors

Radio Interviews for authors.


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How to Add your Facebook Page to Your Blog with a Widget.

I’m going to go look for this right now.

Ronovan's avatarronovanwrites

All links open in this window.

I had two requests about Facebook and the Sidebar.

How to Add your Page to the Sidebar, such as a store or author page.

How To Add your Personal Status Page. Click to got to How To

The Sidebar of your blog is like advertising for yourself. Many of us have a facebook page to go along with our blogs. In some cases the facebook page came first.

If you’ve been around here before then you know it’s time to start the show.

Facebook Store/Author Page

We’re headed to the Dashboard of our blog. I use WordPress, that means what I describe is what I see.

  • Got to Dashboard.
  • Go to Appearance near the bottom on the left.
  • Hover over Appearance or click it.
  • A menu appears and you click Widgets.
  • Scroll down the page that comes up with all the Widgets on…

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#MondayBlogs: Different Writing Techniques of Famous Writers

I really need to follow any one of these strategies. Except maybe not the writing while lying down. I get ideas that way, but writing for me is not comfortable if I am reclining.

Shannon A Thompson's avatarShannon A. Thompson

Intro:

I love info graphics. In fact, I’m a little obsessed with them. So, when Cindy Bates – a freelance editor and writer for Best Essay Tips – contacted me with her very own info graphic to share, I just knew I had to share it. Below, you’ll find a photo that outlines the Different Writing Techniques of Famous Writers.

Different Writing Techniques of Famous Writers 

Being a prolific and excellent writer is never easy. It took years to the world’s most famous and topnotch writers to be able to publish their work. For those who are aspiring to become one, possessing this skill does not happen overnight but you can definitely learn many things from famous writers. To improve your writing skills, constant practice is important. The best way to do this is to have your own journal. When you have your personal journal, you can freely write…

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5 Things You Didn’t Know About Querying as a Debut Author

Good news for debut authors.

Carly Watters's avatarCarly Watters, Literary Agent

I really enjoy talking about debuts.

Many debut authors are nervous about their credentials (do I have enough? do they mean anything?), their contacts (who do I have to know? what if I don’t “know” anyone?), and their book (what if it’s not good enough? what if it’s the best I’ve got?).

I think it’s time debut authors gained their confidence and started to tap into the excitement that agents feel for them.

Here are 5 Things You Didn’t Know About Querying as a Debut Author:

1. Agents look forward to your work. Any agent who is building a list is looking for work. Not all agents are building a list however, so save yourself the heartbreak and query agents who advertise that they’re looking for new talent.

2. Your credentials aren’t holding you back. No bylines? No problem. I never brush off writers who haven’t been published in literary journals or…

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Lambing

Everything you wanted to know about lambing. Spring info about the busy season on a farm.

jwebster2's avatarJim Webster

I just thought I’d sort of describe ‘lambing’ for people. I know there’s ‘Lambing Live’ on telly (or was, I haven’t a clue whether they’re doing it this year or not) but I thought people would like a peep behind the curtain.

Lambing ‘starts’ when you put the tups in. (Tups is the Cumbrian term for rams, male sheep). This year we were cunning, we split the ewes into two groups, each of two hundred. We put the tups into one group, so they’d start lambing in the middle of February, and then three weeks later we put the tups into the next group as well. The idea was that lambing would be spread out a little bit and wouldn’t get totally manic. By and large it worked.

Round about Christmas we had sheep scanned. This told us who was carrying a single, twins or triplets. They were split into…

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The A to Z Lowdown on #Blogging : T is for Twitter

Great article. Helped me understand more. Thanks!