From my personal experience, scrapping part time, I do mostly
eWaste and I very rarely shop the curbs. I do a quick pass through about a 2 mile radius once a week and thats about it. Now keep in mind my schedule is ridiculous already. I work 8-5 mon-fri and then i have a 2nd business that i run out of my garage that comes before scrap. I put approximately 30 hours/wk into that. I have a wife and 3 kids at home that I can't be absent from ALL the time. My kids are 16, 9 and 2. I coach my 9 year old's soccer and softball teams. All of my kids live at home, I have been with my wife for 21 years (since high school) so there is no child support or every other weekend thing for me to worry about. But my time is very precious. I can't afford to waste a minute or I will miss out on something.
I am telling you all of this so you can see that even with a massive amount of other time commitment, but in spite of this I profited last month off of my scrap (and resale) over $1200. And that is after the $375 I paid out to acquire some of the stuff that I have sold (and some that I have not yet sold).
It's all about how much you put into it, the knowledge you gain from experience of your own, and reading the experiences of others on this forum. You can bypass a lot of the costly mistakes by learning as much as you can here before you set foot out your door. Eventually you will contribute to saving someone else a mistake or two, and that's what this place is all about. I have learned a lot more than I will ever teach on here. I think every single member would say the same thing. This is a full time gig for a lot of these guys (and girls) and a part time/hobby for others (myself included) but we all make each other better at what we are doing.
My biggest advice for a beginner - Start in 1 area. Learn it the best you can, and watch where it branches off. If you know most about appliances, focus on those, it will lead you to other parts of the business. For me it was eWaste, now when I pick up a few PCs, there is often some other stuff that rides home with it. Don't view other local scrappers as competition, view them as contacts. Trade with them if the opportunity is there. I buy from some of the local scrappers and pay them more than the yard does on the items I get from them. Why? because it gives them a reason to bring stuff to me that the yard grossly underpays for, and I can still double my money or better. Close no doors. There is more opportunity out there than any one of us has realized yet. There will come a time where you have to pass on things because you simply do not have the time or the space to deal with them. This is the problem you hope to wind up with. And there is only 1 road to it - Go to work.
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