Originally Posted by
RLS0812
I am wondering: after all your expenses ( gas, shipping, labor, taxes, storage, e.t.c.) how much money do you have left over from scrapping
E-Waste ?
I am asking this to figure out a general price that I could pay folks for "stuff" and still have a few $ left over.
Items would include, but not limited to:
Desktops, laptops, cell phones, smart devices, VCRs / DVD / Blue Ray, Flat screen, other
general electronics, and E-Waste in general.
Thank you very much.
I think I get what you are proposing to do. If I have guessed correctly, you want to give a little something to people for them giving something to you worth value, that you can make money on.
If this is the case, allow me to alleviate the guilt you might be experiencing.
People who are throwing out electronics, almost always are doing so because they are old, they have purchased NEW items to replace them, and they do not want to incur the penalty or cost of taking it to the dump and then paying possible hazardous waste prices to dispose of it. Instead, they can kick it to the curb, and some industrious hard working person will come by and pick it up. This is your payment for removing items from their living space, they have no time to properly dispose of themselves.
But if that doesn't convince you that you have every right to make money off of other people free junk, let me attempt once again to give you a good reason NOT to pay for e-waste whenever you can get away with it. If you were purchasing cell phones for example, how much would you be willing to pay, per phone, and feel you treated your customer right? .50 cents? A dollar? 5? If you answered 5, you are paying 4 dollars in most cases, more than what the phone is actually worth in precious metals. .50 cents and you are paying right around half of it's value, which cuts into your gross profit 50%.
I think it's an amazing service that scrappers are providing, without being directed to do so. Industrious people who are hard working, who go out of their way to remove those items people do not care to have anymore, who then break them down into smaller component parts to be sold through the right recycle streams so that they can then be re-used.
I was reading recently that close to 50% of all silver used in industry now, comes from recycling. That is all of you, can you imagine if we were only able to provide half of what industry really needed? Can you imagine what the prices for those things that use silver, specially electronics might be in that case? It would totally change the entire scope of industry.
You provide an invaluable service already, I would thankfully accept anything, anyone is willing to give you for free, and call it even. In many places, people still pay companies to take e-waste away. Many corporations still do.
Scott
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