The trade and exchange? 😁
Good old days! 🗞️
Cash CONverters…
Maybe Lemmy… One day when the population increases.
That would be great!
I see on r/DataHorder that they have a sales part, but obviously it is almost all US based.
Your wish is my command? [email protected]
Geekzone has been good for me in the past. Problem is it can take ages to make the sale.
I’ve got a bunch of stuff at home I need to sell that I can’t be arsed listing on either platform.
WTF is up with the 5mb file limit when uploading, anyway? I’ve gotten as far as taking photos, listing an item, before giving up in disgust because I can’t be arsed downsizing my photos.
Fucking trademe.
Neighbourly lol
I still use Trademe, I don’t think there really is anything else
Craiglist?
I mean it exists.
In all seriousness nothing else exists with any traffic.
Online its only trademe but second hand stores still exist?
Marketplace had so much potential but it’s full of scammy arse holes, trade me has like a $10 minimum that you have to bake into the price of each listing just to cover the sneaky fees they charge
I feel your pain but trade me is at least safer
Aussiee here. Urgh, the people buying and selling on Marketplace are the worst. Are they worse than the other places? (Gumtree in australia)
Weirdly, the current options seem so hopeless that maybe there’s space in the market for someone to create a new buy/sell website and/or app, not unlike what Sam Morgan did with Trademe a long time ago.
I don’t know, there’s been a few that have tried and they’ve all failed. Zillion, sella, allgoods… probably some others that I can’t remember. I think the problem is everyone wants fast, large userbase, no ads, no international sellers, no or low fees, without realising that it’s not really possible, I’m pretty sure even Ebay’s selling fees are higher than Trademe’s. Some one can correct me if I’m wrong, I’ve not sold on Ebay before.
To be honest every time I’ve looked at ebay it’s seemed so full of clutter I’ve struggled to figure out what was going on.
And yeah the critical mass is a big thing. Back in the early 2000s or whenever it was, I remember Sam Morgan was doing stuff like gluing ads to street lamps around town just to get people to look at Trademe. Maybe he got in at the right time. Ebay had already proved the model worked and lots of people wanted it, but it hadn’t bothered to enter the NZ market.
It’s not as if there weren’t alternatives because the huge way of selling stuff then was newspaper classifieds, but Trademe was virtually free in comparison and made it much easiest to list things.
If I recall Ebay did try to enter the market here in the early 2000’s, however they didn’t really localise anything and still operated in USD, so they didn’t really take off. Ebay seems to be pretty popular in Australia though.
Doing some quick reading, apparently Trademe was financially struggling in the early days trying to survive off banner ad’s and didn’t really take off until they introduced success fees. As much as the average person doesn’t want it, fees are pretty much the only way an auction site will grow big enough to compete. Otherwise they need some other way to subsidise the site, unless they’re a massive company like Meta. Even then the lack of moderation on places like FB Marketplace means it gets full of scammers and bots with no way to verify which users can be trusted.
Try local (urgh) Facebook or neighbourly groups.
My partner has quite easily sold a number of items in these local groups.
We found the local buyers to be far more reliable when coming to collect things (or us delivering them locally.)
Oh, if you’re after special interest items (for hobbies etc) then social interest groups on any social media would be a good place to start.