Wow, nice find. I still can't believe how much some people are charging for those books. I wonder if anyone is actually order at the big prices?
I recently got all four Mission: Gamma books, both Avatar books, A Stitch in Time, and 9 other Trek books for $13. You have to keep an eye out.
I was actually talking more about when people were setting it at like $50, or $80. If I wanted a book bad enough I could see spending $13 for a MMPB, but not the biggest amounts.Wow, nice find. I still can't believe how much some people are charging for those books. I wonder if anyone is actually order at the big prices?
A rational seller will usually set his/her price to match the lowest prices seen on the marketplace that will still allow them to make a profit over the cost of shipping the book. That usually translates to setting it at a price that equals or is lower than the lowest price seen in the used catalogue. BUT. A rational seller will not set it at a lower price if there is sufficient demand that the book can be sold at a higher price.
So, yeah, if a given book consistently is set at $9 to $13 at minimum -- or even higher! -- that there is sufficient demand to support that price: Enough people want that book who are willing to pay that higher price that it warrants consistently setting the price that high.
Of course, that's the tightrope that sellers walk -- they try to set their prices low enough that their copy is the one that sells, not the other guy's, but not so low that the majority of other sellers set their prices lower and therefore cause the buyers to be unwilling to pay a higher price anymore, thereby removing value from the book.
But, yeah, anyway, if you keep seeing it at $13, that means that there are people out there willing to pay $13. So setting the price of that item at $13 ensures that the book will consistently go to the persons who most highly value the book.
I was actually talking more about when people were setting it at like $50, or $80. If I wanted a book bad enough I could see spending $13 for a MMPB, but not the biggest amounts.Wow, nice find. I still can't believe how much some people are charging for those books. I wonder if anyone is actually order at the big prices?
A rational seller will usually set his/her price to match the lowest prices seen on the marketplace that will still allow them to make a profit over the cost of shipping the book. That usually translates to setting it at a price that equals or is lower than the lowest price seen in the used catalogue. BUT. A rational seller will not set it at a lower price if there is sufficient demand that the book can be sold at a higher price.
So, yeah, if a given book consistently is set at $9 to $13 at minimum -- or even higher! -- that there is sufficient demand to support that price: Enough people want that book who are willing to pay that higher price that it warrants consistently setting the price that high.
Of course, that's the tightrope that sellers walk -- they try to set their prices low enough that their copy is the one that sells, not the other guy's, but not so low that the majority of other sellers set their prices lower and therefore cause the buyers to be unwilling to pay a higher price anymore, thereby removing value from the book.
But, yeah, anyway, if you keep seeing it at $13, that means that there are people out there willing to pay $13. So setting the price of that item at $13 ensures that the book will consistently go to the persons who most highly value the book.
That buyer obviously values the book more than anyone else, and I see no reason to sell it to someone else who does not value it as much.
That buyer obviously values the book more than anyone else, and I see no reason to sell it to someone else who does not value it as much.
Whether the buyer values it more depends not only on what price they are willing to pay in dollars, but on how valuable a dollar is in their life. $80 is much less to a prosperous executive than it is to a struggling student.
Maybe I should start buying two of every book, for resell value. Hey if we all did that it would be great for Treklit sales!
And I'm very sorry about someone else's poverty, but I am neither responsible for it, nor am I refusing to sell to them an item they need to escape poverty. We are, after all, talking about a luxury item that can easily be obtained for free from a public library.
And I'm very sorry about someone else's poverty, but I am neither responsible for it, nor am I refusing to sell to them an item they need to escape poverty. We are, after all, talking about a luxury item that can easily be obtained for free from a public library.
I agree with your sentiment--a Star Trek book is far from an essential--but I don't agree with the 'easily' obtainable at a public library part. My own public library has a crappy selection of Star Trek books, always have. For most of the books I'd be looking for, I'd have to buy them to read them.
Not a big deal, but I've always been envious of all you people who talk about taking all your books out from the library.
And I'm very sorry about someone else's poverty, but I am neither responsible for it, nor am I refusing to sell to them an item they need to escape poverty. We are, after all, talking about a luxury item that can easily be obtained for free from a public library.
I agree with your sentiment--a Star Trek book is far from an essential--but I don't agree with the 'easily' obtainable at a public library part. My own public library has a crappy selection of Star Trek books, always have. For most of the books I'd be looking for, I'd have to buy them to read them.
Not a big deal, but I've always been envious of all you people who talk about taking all your books out from the library.
That buyer obviously values the book more than anyone else, and I see no reason to sell it to someone else who does not value it as much.
Whether the buyer values it more depends not only on what price they are willing to pay in dollars, but on how valuable a dollar is in their life. $80 is much less to a prosperous executive than it is to a struggling student.
And I'm very sorry about someone else's poverty, but I am neither responsible for it, nor am I refusing to sell to them an item they need to escape poverty. We are, after all, talking about a luxury item that can easily be obtained for free from a public library.
I completely agree that when it comes to items a person needs to live, they ought to be available either for free or at easily affordable prices. (That's why I'm in favor of free single-payer health care a la Canada or France.) But we're not talking about that, we're talking about a Star Trek book. And if they're not willing to pay as much money as I want for the book, I'm not going to sell it to them, and I don't feel particularly bad about that.
Whether the buyer values it more depends not only on what price they are willing to pay in dollars, but on how valuable a dollar is in their life. $80 is much less to a prosperous executive than it is to a struggling student.
And I'm very sorry about someone else's poverty, but I am neither responsible for it, nor am I refusing to sell to them an item they need to escape poverty. We are, after all, talking about a luxury item that can easily be obtained for free from a public library.
I completely agree that when it comes to items a person needs to live, they ought to be available either for free or at easily affordable prices. (That's why I'm in favor of free single-payer health care a la Canada or France.) But we're not talking about that, we're talking about a Star Trek book. And if they're not willing to pay as much money as I want for the book, I'm not going to sell it to them, and I don't feel particularly bad about that.
I think you're missing my point. You claim that "that buyer obviously values the book more than anyone else," which isn't true. However - and why ever - you choose to set your prices, you cannot logically conclude that the person willing to pay the greatest number of dollars is the person who most values the book.
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