Yard Sales in Davis
Sep. 21st, 2005 02:46 pmWhat's the best way to advertise yard sales in the Davis area? Do people find that little to no advertising is necessary because of the amount of foot traffic that will inevitably walk by, anyway? I want to have one, soon, but I'm about a mile up Highland Avenue and I'm afraid that no one would find me if they were just out for a casual stroll.
Thanks!
Thanks!
no subject
Date: 2005-09-21 07:10 pm (UTC)Helpful Hints:
-- Make your flyers *very* readable by drivers whizzing by. Ours had large-print, bold, easy-to-read font saying "TAG SALE" with the address and date/hours also in easy-to-read, bold, almost as large font. We also used a bright paper stock to catch attention.
-- Add a simple, helpful small map at the bottom to show people what main cross streets are nearby.
-- Include a brief list of your big ticket items (bookcase, tv, bicycle, air conditioner, rug, etc.) and any "collections" (size 8 women's shoes, VHS tapes, sci-fi books, etc.).
(Also, you may want to decide now if you care about earlybirds or if you'll sell something before the actual date if someone (from Craigslist, for example) contacts you in advance. )
I know that our tag sale signs prompted several other tag sales within our neighborhood. I know this because I heard about other nearby sales from customers, so I took a break (leaving my stuff in the capable hands of my landlady who I was co-saling with) and walked around to visit some of the other sales. I hadn't seen any signs beside ours. I was told by each neighbor whose sale I visited: "Once we saw your signs go up, we knew there'd be a lot of traffic, so we decided to have our own sale!" Our signs really, really pulled in a ton of people even though we were off Mass. Ave. by five blocks and lived down a tiny one-way street.
Good luck!