A resourceful woman shared how to make a tidy sum on Vinted with some simple tricks – as she notes many people often make errors.
If you’re battling with a wardrobe full of clothes that never see the light of day, selling them online could be a great way to get rid of your unwanted items while making cash.
While traditional sites like eBay, Depop, and Facebook Marketplace have long been the go-tos for offloading pre-loved threads, Vinted has fast becoming the hot spot.
Good sellers often share their inside tips for raking in sales, and HR worker Robyn Mort is on a quest to pocket £10,000 with “side hustles”. Robyn realised Vinted was her ticket to boosting her bank balance.
She recently managed to earn a whopping £1,528.01 using the app, attributing her success to a handful of key tactics. Over her TikTok account, @budgetingrobyn, Robyn revealed: “I’ve made £1,500 on Vinted since last year and there are definitely tips you need to know to do well on there and to get quick sales.”
She disclosed a strategy to attract shoppers’ attention, and said: “If you have 30 items to put on Vinted, do not upload them all at once. Upload five every day consistently. I don’t know why, but it boosts the algorithm on Vinted and more people end up seeing your items.”
Robyn went on to say: “I take all of my pictures, I leave them on my phone, I do five a day and it’s super easy to do.”
The Welsh woman also gave away her secret sauce for making a killing online, underscoring the vitality of snapping a minimum of three pictures per piece, capturing the front, back and any labels or flaws.
She also advises to offer prices on Vinted. Robyn explained: “If someone favourites an item of yours, you make them an offer straight away. It doesn’t have to be much, it can be 50p, and that person is more likely to buy that item because they think they’ve got a good deal.”
She disclosed that roughly half of her offers are snapped up on the spot. Robyn also recommends if an item hasn’t been sold in eight weeks, vendors should remove the listing and re-upload it to give it a fresh presence in search results.
“It boosts it back to the top of the algorithm and back to the top of that search handle for whatever it is that you’re selling,” she said.
The thrifty expert, who delights in imparting her budgeting expertise, used this strategy on items that had been sitting unsold on her page for ages, which she assumed would “never sell”.
In addition, Robyn suggests utilising cashback apps and filling out surveys as ways to pocket and conserve extra money.
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