Hello sir, Do you buy stones online? I have one unheated 8.82cts natural blue sapphire. If you do buy, please tell me. And how can I reach you in personal, I am from Pakistan.
Well she always gives him a lower price since they’re good family. She’s probably just building good relations for the future. “Remember all those times I sold to you for so much cheaper? You pretty much owe me now.” 😂
she has become my favorite cameo on the channel. she isnt tryna get over & she isnt shortchanging herself. she could get more but she doesnt need it or want it. she shoots extremely straight & i love that. easily my fav rn 🙏🏾
Yeah and they have to run a business, so they have to make a profit in order to continue working, eating and living indoors. It's how capitalism works.
@@russell_szabados You dont have to make 300% profit on your item. Above 30% profit (excluding all expenses), you are scamming people and they should not do business with you.
most precious metal scrap buyers/shops won't buy the stones, they usually pay you for the weight that the ring/jewelry is cast in. So she probably paid less then $40 for that stone.
This right here is how some families or even communities get ahead in life. Theyre kind to each other and help each other out even in business instead of competing with one another
If she’s happy with her selling price that’s all that really matters. She probably has some form of business that allowed her to get it at a price where she profited and he probably has the connections, name, and can hold onto it long enough to be able to sell it full retail. If she owns a pawn shop or something similar her ability to sell it full price is greatly diminished as only people knowing exactly what it is will be willing to pay full retail.
💀💀💀💀 if she wasn't making money she wouldn't have sold it lmaooo she could've asked/bargained for more but she didn't want or need more. this is a great sale.
I was so lucky. Someone sold me diamond studs for a fair price so I purchased right away. They pulled them from the back too. Very nice people. Someone else quoted me 1800 for the same thing and I paid 1000
For everyone saying she's low balling herself, look at her cloths, she don't need much money from him, and she's probably selling the jewel because she has more expensive ones to wear 😂
They are family and she knows the business and she's not trying to screw him but she's still there to make a $ she gave him a price that she was happy with and that she knew he would be happy with so they both came out on top. That is good business.
He took away 1000 for the price of the platinum (I think it was platinum anyway) so he could divide to find the price per carat of the gem. I can’t blame him because if he made a simple mistake in calculation he could have lost money. In exams I be checking the simplest maths on my calculator just in case too so I can’t blame him lmao
@@TBButtSmoothyI completely agree, everyone keeps saying he had to do the math on a calculator in the comments and it’s unreasonable. You literally explained it perfectly, some people are just incompetent
I know it's obvious by now, but the difference in price is kinda crazy to me. A random person with no gem knowledge who liked this ring may pay the amount on the price tag ($8000), when the actual fair price is less than half of that.
Well its not fair price he paid, its wholesale/vendor price….. in majority of cases especially gia certified gemstones an average shopper on the street isnt going to have the connections to purchase the item at that $8000 gia value because the setting also has a value probably above $1000 retail awesome if you saw this ring for sale with no middle man and no connections its probably minimum $8000 but as high as maybe $14,000 or so…. So paying $3500 you need to account that he needs to make his profit. You have the cost of his education, the cost of his connections, the cost of the building, insurance cost, security costs, and pay for himself for brokering the deal as well as pay himself as an employee when he goes to sell it….odds are she is only even able to offer so low because direct connections to a gemstone mine or direct from mine cutter….. anyone can make the money if they have the education, connections, and money to do so.
@@theAppleWizz also true, be careful out there. Ive seen people sell coins worth a penny for $20 and much more…. But hopefully you get lucky and find things underpriced
heres a random tut on how to make a molotov cocktail: get a wine or beer bottle (preferably a vodka bottle) and fill it up with either kerosene, alcohol, or gasoline. Just not gasoline burns faster and isn’t that great. So pour your flammable liquid of choice and fill the bottle 3/4 with it. then get some styrofoam and mix it acetone until its like syrup. then pour it in the bottle with your flammable liquid. Then stuff a rag or piece of cloth into the opening until its sealed. light it and throw. From, your molotov guy
@@jasperdecraene6239even if it’s the most basic of math, they will put it on the calculator. a lot of the time to show it back to the person just so they can physically see the number laid out. i’m sure there’s some psychology behind it and sales tactics but other than that i’m not sure lol
This does not make her bad at sales…. She made the sale at asking price that is a huge win. Both parties agreed on the sale of the product which means she bought it at the smart wholesale price. Of course different situations vary. I won’t say my opinion is right but I feel she did a great job.