15 cards, 7 sellers, only $5 shipping!

October 22, 2007

Today Leif from Louisiana placed a record setting order for us. He purchased from 7 different sellers across 4 different states. Because we house all of the cards for sale on our site, we were able to only charge $5 in shipping for the 15 cards ordered.

Try to order 2-3 cards from 7 different sellers on any other website and see how close you can get to $5 shipping. This is just one of the ways we are changing the game and making a more efficient, safer, and easier place to buy and sell sports cards.

Below are examples of a few cards that recently arrived from all across the US and were sold to a man in Louisiana.

1958 Topps #476 - Stan Musial AS TP - Courtesy of CheckOutMyCards.com
bfarbman was the original owner of this 1958 Topps Stan Musial which arrived from Pennsylvania a little over a week ago. It has a book value of $50, and it sold for $45.

1998 Topps Clemente #18 - Roberto Clemente 1972 - Courtesy of CheckOutMyCards.com
wildpionther10 was the original owner of this 1998 Topps Clemente reprint which arrived from Ohio on Friday. wildpionther10 set his asking price on Saturday, and the card sold on Sunday. This card has a book value of $8, and it sold for $5.

1991 Topps Archives 1953 #319 - Ted Williams - Courtesy of CheckOutMyCards.com
DavesCards was the original owner of this 1991 Topps Archives Ted Williams which arrived from Everett, WA on Wednesday. DavesCards is a new member of our top 10 sellers featured on our home page. He set his asking asking price on Saturday, and the card sold on Sunday. It has a book value of $10, and it sold for $7.50.


Making waves at the NSCC with my little brother!

August 24, 2007

At the National Sports Collectors Convention we picked up some cards that are sure to be collector’s items.

Thanks to Upper Deck, we were able to obtain the following:
2007 Upper Deck National Sports Collectors Convention #1 - Tim Getsch 2007 Upper Deck National Sports Collectors Convention #2 - Julia Getsch 2007 Upper Deck National Sports Collectors Convention #3 - John Neumann

It’s the CHECKOUTMYCARDS.com team!

In case you’re wondering, John Neumann is my little brother who joined our team for the week. I flew from Seattle to Minneapolis where Johnny lives, picked him up, and together we made the drive to Cleveland! His help was invaluable. If he lived closer we would recruit him!

In fact, while at the convention, he was recruited for and quoted in a Beckett article!

“I just want to collect cards,” said John Neumann. “I don’t care what sport or who the player is. I just want to add relevant cards to my collection, even if the cards are of Barry Bonds.”

As a buyer/seller on our site, you’ll be seeing more of Johnny!

Check out Johnny’s cards for sale

Julia


And you think the iPhone is cool…

August 22, 2007

15 years ago, this was cool! People used to hold a brick to their face and talk into it.

1993 SP #246 - Brian Harper
Photo courtesy of CheckOutMyCards.com


More relevant than eBay, craigslist, and Beckett

August 13, 2007

I started writing this post thinking that we had reached a milestone by having people use our scans on ebay.

eBay Item number: 120150396189 Cal Ripken - Fleer 1988 Card #570

However, the real milestone is that google has started ranking pages on our site as more relavant than similar matches on eBay, craigslist, and Beckett.com. I think that is pretty good company!

If you take the description of the eBay auction mentioned above, “Cal Ripken - Fleer 1988 Card #570″, and search google for it, you will find that the #1 & #2 hits are now our site. #3 & #4 are eBay, #6 is craigslist, and #9 is Beckett.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Cal+Ripken+-+Fleer+1988+Card+%23570&btnG=Google+Search
#1 on Google

This auction happens to be starting at $2.00 for a card you can buy from our site for $0.50.
http://www.checkoutmycards.com/cards/Baseball/1988/Fleer/570/Cal_Ripken


Picked up by SportsCollectorsDaily.com

July 28, 2007

Wow, the folks over at SportsCollectorsDaily.com really stay on top of the industry. Within 48 hours of our article in the seattlest.com, they had pinged us and posted a nice summary of the article.

Start-Up Sports Card Site Op Knows Tech Side


Portland Card Show This Weekend!

July 18, 2007

Hey, Everyone!

On Friday we are going live with new features that will enable you (the public) to sell your cards on our site!

All day Saturday and Sunday we are going to be at the card show at the Jantzen Beach Super Center Shopping Mall in Portland, OR.

All you Portland people, come see us!

We look forward to meeting you!

The CheckOutMyCards.com Staff


National Sports Collectors Convention in 2 weeks!

July 14, 2007

Come meet us at the National Sports Collectors Convention in Cleveland, August 1-5!
http://www.nsccshow.com

Julia and I will be there.

Let us know if you are planning to be at the show, and we will keep an eye out for you.


eBay Listing Service from CheckOutMyCards.com

July 14, 2007

Like the quality scans and user interface that you see on CheckOutMyCards.com?

We have gotten a lot of requests recently for software that would help people list eBay auctions. These days you pretty much have to include a scanned image if you want your auction to sell. Unfortunately it is very tedious to scan all those cards and look up their book value. Well, as you can tell from our site, we have cracked that nut, and now we are considering the possibility of offering a service that allows you to easily create eBay auctions.

Imagine this… You throw some cards on a scanner and click a button in a software application provided for you by CheckOutMyCards.com. The software scans your cards at the appropriate resolution for high-quality images and then uploads the data to CheckOutMyCards.com for processing. The next day you log into CheckOutMyCards.com and see a list of cataloged cards. It might look something like this.

eBay Prototype

From here you would be able to click a button that would automatically create a professionally designed eBay auction based on your boilerplate text. The auction would have similar functionality to what you find today on the Card Details pages of CheckOutMyCards.com. Potential bidders would be able to hover over the thumbnails to flip between the front and back of the card, and they would be able to click to view the 2x zoomed image of either the front or the back of the card.

How much would that service be worth to you? How many cards can you manually scan, crop, lookup, and list in an hour? How much does it cost for software that only helps with part of the process?

Sound interesting? Let me know what you think. Send mail to TimGetsch@checkoutmycards.com. If we get enough interest, we will increase the priority of building this service.


A new day for baseball card collectors

March 24, 2007

Collecting baseball cards is so much fun but way too hard and time consuming. It doesn’t need to be like this. The following is a short biography of my collecting experience and a vision of what I want to enable for fellow collectors.

As a child I started collecting baseball cards in 1986. Every time we would memorize a Bible verse, our youth group leader would give us a pack of baseball cards. I remember the first time I saw a price guide and found out that my Lenny Dykstra rookie card was worth $2. As an eight year old, this was really exciting.
1986 Topps Lenny Dykstra RC

1987 was a big year for us in Minnesota. The Twins won the World Series, so now it was time for me to start following major league baseball. The next year, I discovered a new hero, Orel Hershiser. After 59 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings, a gold glove, and a World Series MVP, I had to get his rookie card. That brought me to my first sports card show at the Thunderbird Hotel in Bloomington, MN where I paid $6 for a 1985 Topps Orel Hershiser rookie card.

Being in love with numbers, I studied the stats every week in the newspaper, and I read all of the prices each month when the Beckett came out. The other day I ran across a line graph I had plotted by hand to track the price changes for the Robin Yount and George Brett rookie cards. By the time I was 12 I had my first table at a card show. Seeing how popular someone’s dice game was, I went home and calculated all of the odds so that I could optimize the customer’s expected value without risking too much of a loss for me. (Yes, I eventually became the captain of my high school math team.) The dice game was a big hit at my next card show.

I don’t know if it was my love of numbers that drew me to sports cards, or if it was sports cards that gave me a reason to love numbers. But growing up, my parents thought I spent way too much time and money on sports cards (probably true). So they banned me from collecting sports cards, but we all know how obedient teenagers are. This inspired some childhood “creativity.”

In 1996 I started going to college, and very quickly ran out of extra money. At this point my childhood passion had to be shelved, and the next few years were spent cultivating my interests in numbers and computers. I received my BS in Math and Master’s degree in Computer Science from the U of MN. In 1999, I started working for Microsoft as a Program Manager on Excel. I like to think sports cards played a big part in sparking my interests in math and inspiring me to get through college… so that I could get a job making enough money to afford more cards. :-)

In 2003, after working very long and hard on Microsoft Access 2003, I got a chance to poke my head out at the world. I discovered etopps.com and rediscovered eBay. My sports card interests had laid dormant for 7 years, and the industry had changed a lot. Through eBay, I was able to find all of the cards I was collecting in 1996 for next to nothing.

eBay can be a very time consuming hobby. So I built an Access database to track eBay auctions, and I was able to successfully acquire tons of cards for very low prices. Of course, I got way more cards than I needed, and I wanted to let others pick and choose cards from the big lots that I was winning. So I started to build the site LowPriceCards.com as a fun little hobby.

While talking to a local dealer, he asked where I typically bought cards. When I mentioned that that I got them online, he was curious how I was willing to pay for cards that I couldn’t see. Though the cards I was getting from eBay weren’t always perfect, I was still getting a good enough price to make it worth my while. However, this comment stuck with me. I realized that buying and selling sports cards online was a fairly risky and time consuming venture for most collectors.

Drawbacks of collecting sports cards online

  • Almost never get to see what you are actually getting
  • Typically high prices if you do get to see what you are getting
  • Small transactions are not cost effective (payment charges and shipping charges are a killer, mailing checks or SASEs take too much time)
  • Beckett.com, naxcom.com, sportlots.com, and other collector sites force you to pay for shipping from each dealer separately
  • Not worth the effort when another dealer or user doesn’t follow through
  • Time consuming to keep an eye out for your favorite player, set, or card
  • Most sports card websites are very poorly designed
    • Poor search functionality
    • Limited to no browsing
    • Tedious shopping cart experience
    • Required user account creation and log-in
    • Out of date inventory

Drawbacks of selling cards online

  • Little or no tools for managing your inventory
  • Time consuming to catalog inventory
  • Impossible to find sold inventory
  • Tedious packaging and shipping process
  • High maintenance costs
  • Large seller fees

These are just some of the drawbacks for buying and selling cards online. I am sure many of you have seen more areas that you would like to improve. Many of these issues were addressed by LowPriceCards.com.

LowPriceCards.com Features

  • Every card offers a 2x zoom of both the front and back (patent-pending technology)
  • Low prices (50% off book on average)
  • Friendly and prompt customer service
  • RSS feeds to subscribe to your favorite player, set, or card
  • Well designed
    • Simple and flexible search functionality
    • AJAX shopping cart experience
    • No log-in required
    • Inventory always up to date
  • Powerful database for managing our inventory
  • Ultra-fast inventory cataloging
  • Seconds to find sold inventory
  • Optimized packaging and shipping process
  • Low maintenance costs

The problem with LowPriceCards.com was that it only helped me and a couple buyers that were interested in my inventory. I kept getting requests from people who wanted to post their inventory on a site like mine. So I decided to open this functionality to fellow collectors.

In 2006, my wife and I formed Julia Getsch Enterprises, LLC, and in early 2007 we launched CheckOutMyCards.com as an effort to become the premier sports card consignment website. We are currently beta testing our consignment functionality with a handful of users, and a month ago we hired a web developer to work on our site full-time. Over the next few months we will be rolling out many new features. Here is a sampling of what is to come.

How you might use CheckOutMyCards.com

  • No hassle consignment and purchasing (get rid of the cards you don’t want, and pick up the cards you do)
  • Just send us the cards you want to sell or trade
  • Pick prices for individual cards or set pricing rules for players or sets
  • Receive notification when a card’s book price changes
  • Funds automatically added to your account when cards are sold
  • No need to contact the buyer, package the inventory, or ship the items, we do that for you
  • Buy cards and have them added to your online inventory (avoid shipping fees)
  • Use funds in your account to instantly add items to your online inventory (no shopping cart necessary)
  • Minimize shipping fees by holding items in your online inventory until you have multiple items to ship
  • Enable cost-effective small transactions by using funds in your account

These are just a few of the ways that we are hoping CheckOutMyCards.com will improve your collecting experience. We have many additional innovations that we will be rolling out soon. So keep an eye on this blog, and sign up to be notified as more functionality becomes available.