Someone once gave me a CD of heavy metal Hanukkah songs called Gods of Fire. It was funny for a minute. Then it sat on a shelf for years, because I didnât want to throw it away and itâs not like anyone on eBay would buy it from me, but I finally found a taker. The new company Decluttr paid me $2.85 for it, which, when combined with a bunch of other crap I sent them, netted me a total of $45.95. Decluttr buys anything--because thatâs their business model. They will literally buy any CD, DVD, or video game you want to mail them. And they pay the postage, too.
âWe have 470 Alanis Morissette Jagged Little Pill CDs,â says its U.S. president, Brett Lauter. âWe canât get rid of them. We open up the box and itâs like, not another one! But weâre still buying them.â
This isnât some charity for 1990s survivors. The company, including its U.K. counterpart, notched more than $150 million in revenue last year.
The thinking goes like this: Although the number of physical-media retailers has gone down--farewell to Borders, Blockbuster, and many others--an actual market for this stuff still exists. In 2013, 165.4 million CDs were sold, according to Nielsen SoundScan. And although consumers could sell their own stuff on eBay or Amazon, itâs a big pain: Weâd have to list them individually and manage a ton of listings, all to make a few measly bucks a pop, if anything at all. Who has the time?
Decluttr takes advantage of that gap. The reason it buys everything is simple, Lauter says: âThe first CD you scan in may be another Jagged Little Pill. If we say weâre not going to buy it, you may give up. We just lost you. So weâre going to give you the minimum, 50 cents, because maybe your second one is Green Dayâs Insomniac, and oh my gosh, this will sell quickly.â In fact, that 1995 album is one of the hottest on the market now; Decluttr currently pays people $5 for it. âIt would be poor judgment on our part if weâd blown you off on your first CD.â
Decluttr then sells your media in a variety of ways, and earns more than a 50% margin.
The amount it pays you is controlled by a proprietary algorithm, which takes into account how many copies of an item are already in its warehouse, what the item sells for on Amazon or eBay, and how quickly it usually moves. That makes Decluttrâs prices a sort of Billboard chart for the bizarro second-hand market. Whatâs super hot right now? Judy Collinsâs 1971 album Living. âWeâre paying $5 because they come in and fly off the shelves,â Lauter says. Whatâs not hot? The widescreen DVD edition of the 2000 X-Men movie; he has 416 of them piling up.
The company began life in the U.K. in 2007 as musicMagpie, and now receives 100,000 items there every day. Its two British co-founders officially launched a U.S. expansion this past January; they hired Lauter, the one-time CMO of Wine.com, to head up the operation. Lauterâs first move: change the U.S. versionâs name to one Americans can understand. (The magpie reference only works in the U.K., where people commonly know it as a bird that picks up shiny objects.) Although itâs done very little marketing, Decluttr is already buying 10,000 items a day from people. Lauter expects to reach profitability by the end of the year.
Thereâs only one restriction on selling to Decluttr: All media must come with the original artwork. If you kept a disc but threw away the jewel case with the art inside, youâre out of luck. Otherwise, selling is simple. First, download the app. (Thereâs a web version too, but the app is more elegant.) Use it to scan the barcodes of any items youâre selling; the system instantly tells you what Decluttr will pay. Once youâre done--you need to sell a minimum of 10 items, but thereâs no maximum--the system emails you a UPS sheet, which you affix to a box and send off.
Your package arrives in a warehouse just north of Atlanta, where employees confirm that you sent what you promised. Items are immediately listed on Amazon, eBay, or Decluttrâs own site for resale. (Lauter is so embarrassed by Decluttrâs site, which sells 20 items a month, that he refuses to reveal its name: âItâs really, really bad. Honestly, people who are buying off of it right now must be masochists.â He says a better version will be up in a few months.) When a disc is bought, Decluttr buffs it up and, if needed, replaces its jewel case. Then itâs mailed off to its new owner.
For a world that supposedly stopped buying CDs, sales happen quickly. I sent in a box of 30 items in late February, and within its first day of arrival, the first CD was sold: Depeche Modeâs Delta Machine was sent back to its native U.K. Three weeks later, 12 more items had found new homes.
Decluttr wonât reveal how much my (or anyoneâs) CDs sell for, or show any of the individual listings online. This is the one opaque part of its process. Thatâs in part because doing so would violate agreements the company has with Amazon and eBay. But thereâs also security in that secrecy: Decluttr doesnât want to inspire copycats who are impressed by their margins, or make customers feel ripped off. âSome consumers would say, âI just sold you this DVD for a dollar, and youâre selling it for two dollars!ââ Lauter says. âThey tend to forget, yeah, we paid you a dollar, but we also paid all the shipping, weâre putting it in inventory, weâre refurbishing it, and putting new cases on, and weâre handling customer service issues.ââ (For what itâs worth, I found only one copy of my heavy-metal Hanukkah CD on eBay. Itâs going for $8.98, being sold by a user called estocks_usa. Decluttr wonât confirm whether this is the same CD they bought from me for one third the price. Either way: Good luck with that, estocks_usa.)
So, what will happen to all those languishing copies of Jagged Little Pill? In a few months, Decluttr will have a solution: Itâs launching a wholesaling business, where itâll sell used CDs in bulk to places like Dollar Tree and mom-and-pop shops. The margin is lower, but at least Decluttr can offload the junkiest of the junk. This already happens in the U.K., where a discount chain might, say, request a random mix of 200 CDs at a time. If the store prefers, Decluttr will even shrink-wrap its selections so that they look new. Decluttr is also seeking out new relationships with retailers overseas, particularly in parts of the world where physical CDs are more popular.
Lauter is confident that the market for spinning plastic discs will be around for some time. A quarter of Decluttr users, he says, arenât selling because they donât want the albums anymore; theyâre doing so to make room for more, newer CDs. Still, the numbers donât look good: CD sales dropped 14.5% between 2012 and 2013, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
Perhaps thatâs why Decluttr is also expanding past media. Its U.K. version is already buying peopleâs electronics and used designer clothing; it washes or patches them up, then sells them the same way it hawks music. Lauter expects to do the same by 2015. âWhen we build up our clothing business, maybe in a year or so, I might see if there a great boutique space in SoHo or something [for Decluttr to sell clothes],â he says. âWe get great products--literally, True Religion jeans that cost $300 and maybe someoneâs worn two times, and we refurbish them and sell them for $50 dollars. Thatâs a great deal for somebody.â
Maybe Alanis Morissette has some old jeans sheâd like to sell.
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