After an item is graded, two questions decide the outcome: can we repair it, and should we? This clip explains how to price the repair decision using parts cost, labor minutes, current demand, and time-to-sell; how QC verifies the work to brand standards and lowers returns; and how to publish high-trust listings with real, item-specific photos, clear condition notes, lifecycle history, and accurate pricing.
For rentals, refurbishment is built into fleet operations—items typically skip photo listings during service life, then de-fleet into refurbished resale with a final QC and full history to improve pricing and conversion.
Karri: Okay, so now the product has been graded, so now we know if it’s physically possible to refurbish it and then it’s all about the economics. Should we repair, or should we go to the next best use case?
Tuomo: I think that’s actually pretty good. First “can we,” then “should we.” Let’s go with the scenario where we can and we should. Do we want to push the grading up by repair? Let’s say the repair is in budget and makes sense—then we perform the repair and after that it goes to quality control to make sure the work was done correctly, because you’re dismantling things or you have strict brand guidelines. Someone looks at the products and checks they meet the guidelines, and then you usually re-catalog them so you have an inventory article at a known grade that you can sell or re-rent.
Tuomo: If we want to sell it as refurbished or secondhand, it might be that at grading we already decided it’s grade one—no repair needed—so we sell it as is. In a secondhand shop you might just grade and sell. Often there’s a quick catalog step where the item goes to a small photo station: camera pointing at a table, you place the item, snap the photos, and a listing is generated for your online store or other channels with the attached grade and history.
Tuomo: You don’t have to expose every inventory detail in the listing—you can transform it. Pull in the grading and lifecycle information based on what your customers value. Some want granular detail; others just want to see “good as new.” So you categorize, capture photos, and set price and notes accordingly.
Tuomo: The big upside is using real, item-specific photos instead of generic catalog images. Buyers can zoom the exact bike or phone they’re getting, see scratches, and decide if they care. That’s why tracking each item through the flow matters—you can use that data to serve customers better and improve conversion.
Tuomo: Once QC is done and the listing is live, it’s effectively ready to be purchased—or booked, if it’s a rental.
Tuomo: With rentals, refurbishment is built in from day one. You typically skip photo listings because you’re selling a service; you just confirm it meets fleet criteria. At end-of-life, many rental items are de-fleeted into refurbished resale: you already know the condition and history, run a final QC, list with images and notes, and you’re up and running.