Hello, it's contrarian night owl here, telling another tale about how obsessed we are with saving our cash.
I can tell you're shocked already.
Saving is a good thing, right? It's the American way. Getting the cheapest possible deal on whatever you're interested in purchasing gets you a little gold star or check mark somewhere, correct?
Actually, I don't think that's the way it works. Which is why I haven't been much for trying to find the cheapest way to buy cards. I've addressed this before. I see the point if you're on a strict budget or your job status is shaky or you're paying tuition for three kids in college. But saving for saving's sake I just don't get.
Sure, I get excited when I find a deal on ebay. And I pat myself on the back when I discover a shirt I bought that I like was on clearance. But it's never the point of the sale for me. The point is: did I get what I want?
Recently, I think I found another point, when it comes to purchasing cards, that I value more than savings. It has to do with waiting.
I decided to try the box feature with sportlots. As a relative sportlots newbie (I started making purchases some time in 2018), all of my card purchases from the site arrived directly from the seller.
That worked for me. I'd usually wait a couple weeks, sometimes less, and a bunch of PWEs from all different areas of the country would start floating into my mailbox. I did notice that I was paying a fair amount for shipping with that method but I was willing to overlook it.
Then Nachos Grande made a blog post about his experience with sportlots and how he was paying way too much for shipping. It really bothered him. And because of that, I thought, well, maybe it should bother me.
He tried the sportlots box feature and he was a lot happier with that, it saved him quite a bit on shipping. Just about everyone in the comments agreed that was the smarter way to go, too. Well, except for me, I didn't really get it. There's that contrarian streak.
But I figured, OK, I should at least try it. Everyone seems to think it's the more sensible way.
So, the second week of December I placed a sportlots order using the box feature for the first time. For those who don't know, the box feature allows you to order from multiple dealers still, but instead of them shipping the cards directly to you, they ship them to your box. When all of your orders have arrived in the box, you pay the reduced shipping charge and they send the cards to you.
That's what I did. My shipping ended up being cut in half. So yay! Savings!
And I also waited.
And waited.
And waited.
I waited for each dealer's order to make its way to the box, bit by achingly slow bit.
The normal two weeks or so I used to wait for sportslots envelopes to show up came and went. Then another two weeks came and went.
It took so long that I ended up canceling the last card that hadn't reached the box because the card wasn't worth waiting for any longer.
The box arrived at my house on Saturday. Thirty-four days after I placed the order.
Now, that actually isn't a long time when you think about it. This is someone who used to wait 6-to-8 weeks to get some junky thing off a cereal box back in the '70s.
But I didn't like it.
I know this might be an extreme example because of the time I placed the order. It was Christmas time. And post offices were backed up like never before. Mail was delayed everywhere (I'm still waiting for an envelope from Pennsylvania to show up). Sportlots box orders probably don't usually take a month to appear I'm guessing.
But the point I'm making here is sometimes when you save, you pay.
I often pay extra not because I like paying extra money but because I want the job done right.
There is a plumbing and heating business in town that gets all my business. Sometimes when people I know hear that we went to this particular place to get something fixed, they'll say the same thing, "Oh, they're so expensive."
Yeah, OK. Well, I've tried other places that were actually cheaper. One time I couldn't get an appointment with the normal place because it was a busy time. I went with someone else. Someone cheaper. It was a disaster. I thought he was going to kill every pipe in the house. You're paying for more than the product. You're paying for service, too.
People, I find, get addicted to deals. And sometimes that's good. It's not a bad thing to want to save money. Most of the time it's a good thing. You've seen me display my goodies from the online dime box store, right? I do like cheap cards.
But sometimes, I don't know. I just don't get it. Sometimes you miss out on stuff because you're looking for a couple of dollars off. Is that smart? It's not like you have to fill out a report to someone if you got a card for $6.25 but you could have gotten it for $3.95. At least I hope there isn't.
Anyway, I'll try the box order again some time, when it's less hectic. Because I think that kind of wait wasn't normal. If it is normal, I'll just pay my extra 5 bucks or whatever it is and get all those individual envelopes floating into my mail box again.
All of the above cards came from that box order (plus a few others that are for other posts or trades).
The two 1975 Topps buybacks are the first ones I've bought since last February! I'm hearing COMC is starting to get back to normal, maybe I'll finally order shipment of a few more soon.
As with collecting, people can approach spending any way they like. If they're not going over their budget than it's entirely their business. Even if they are going over their budget, it's their business if no one is dependent on them.
I never feel guilty if I'm not saving at every opportunity because I know the funds are there. But then there are those moments where someone says something and, I don't know, I feel like I'm doing something wrong. I'd just prefer not to be lectured by the grocery store clerk when I didn't buy the sale item (and, yup, that's happened). I probably shouldn't let it bother me. I get too flustered by what people say sometimes. It's not any of their business.
We always have our reasons for why we do what we do.
And sometimes that reason is: do I want to save or do I want to wait?
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RIP, Don Sutton.
I am at a loss.
Comments
re: SportsLots.....Once I figured out their clunky website I started buying more and more stuff there. My last order included about twenty some odd different sellers and one or two took their sweet time getting my purchases to my box but it still was better than waiting on COMC.
The REALLY fun part is opening the box and THEN opening 25 different envelopes. Great way to kill an entire evening!
Of all the baseball HOFers who passed away over the past year are so the only two that I saw either on TV or baseball cards were Phil Niekro and Don Sutton. They're not the first HOFers who have passed away from my baseball-loving lifetime (Puckett and Gwynn come to mind) but this Chuck D track that I first heard hours before the news about Sutto is hitting even harder now.
As for the savings, I hate to promote stereotyped, but aside from my big nose and my love for Chinese food, the thirst to save money is the main thing I get from being a Jew. For me that's a lot of the fun of the hobby is tracking down something for a low price. But that's me, everyone has different priorities and goals.
https://www.mlb.com/video/chuck-d-s-tribute-to-mlb-legends
much lighter note. i have also used sportlots and tried the box deal...hated it. i had completely forgotten what cards i ordered and actually double bought them prior to arriving at my house.
There were so many cards that I needed that I ended up ordering over 400 cards. No way that I was going over the value or weight limit.
Then I realized how they calculate the weight and I realized that I was going to get screwed because after 4lbs it'd have to be sent international priority parcel which had no deal on taxes and duty. I'm in Ontario, so taxes alone would be 13% of the value.
To be honest, never really considered the weight of a single card. Looks like about 9-10 regular cards per ounce. Or if you buy a single card from a dealer, that's rounded up to an ounce. Those rounded up ounces quickly have added up. I got in touch with support and to their credit helped me out getting my first shipment under 4lbs. but I still have over 200 cards yet to arrive in the box. I'm wondering if I would have been better off with skipping the box or taking my chances with the duties and taxes.
I know it's my fault for not fully understanding all the finer points before I went crazy with the ordering but it's definitely tarnished my experience with the box.
Rogers Hornsby once said, "People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring."
For me, the longest wait is from last out of the World Series to the first day of spring training. A couple of teams have released their 2021 reporting dates, and the Orioles are the earliest. Their pitchers and catchers report on Feb. 16.
That's less than four weeks. We're getting there.
As a seller, it used to really bug me to sell one 18 cent card with 99 cents shipping. The 5-10 cents after fees and shipping I made per order really made me want to not even bother with doing it. But when you can combine several small orders into one envelope, it at least makes it feel like the effort is worth it. And if you are looking into selling on Sportlots, small orders are likely to be 95% of your sales. I seldom get orders of more than 4-5 cards at a time.
As a buyer, I like because I can knock out entire team sets regardless of whether one particular seller has everything I need. I also like being able to take a particular year want list and just go through and add everything to the cart from a whole year. Then I go through the cart and make eliminations based on shipping costs. It works for me anyway.
My second sportlots box is now on its way, with a $10 sportlots credit in hand because the shipping cost ended up being less than estimated. I think I had read somewhere that they do this, but had forgotten.
I took a step back after my previous comment and put things in perspective. I certainly am paying a lot more in shipping than I had expected but I've saved a ton because I bought a ton of 0.18 cards that probably would have cost me over a buck at COMC or I would have paid a ton in shipping to Canada on eBay. Overall I think I've gotten good value from the box, even though things haven't gone as I've expected. I spent literally 3 weeks going through my player wantlists and I guess my frustration got the better of me.
I miscounted... I've got almost 600 cards coming my way. I'll be a happy customer once they all arrive.