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own skills and interests for ideas on finding product. They began by selling their own used golf equipment. Satisfied with the response, they turned next to their network of golf enthusiasts for more supply. The first stop was a golf pro shop at a local country club, where a friend sold them $5,000 worth of liquidated equipment. "From there, we started looking for more people we knew in the golf business," Stallard says. The effort stretched from the company's base in Franklin, Ohio, to other areas of the state and beyond.Product sources are only as limited as your imagination. A friend eager to be rid of a dusty record collection could turn into an eBay windfall. More traditional sources are garage sales, thrift shops, going out of business sales, real estate and storage site auctions, and even junkyards. "You can make an extra $500 to $1,000 a month going to garage sales and thrift shops," says Skip McGrath, eBay PowerSeller and principal of Vision One Press in Anacortes, Washington, which publishes McGrath's newsletter and books about eBay. "Virtually anything sells."It helps to be a shopaholic with a knack for finding deals like Margaret Demopoulos, 40, of Durham, New Hampshire (eBay User ID: goatbeard). She haunts local retailers and outlets looking for deeply discounted items, reasoning that the greater discount, the greater the potential profit. One past success was with LeapPads, a children's educational toy, bought for $9 each and sold for $21 each on eBay.Sun W. Kim, 30, recognized an eBay opportunity in a bucket full of computer cables at a Los Angeles flea market. He paid 50