…
and headings similarly:…
. Probably need to use heading tags for sections. We must not use placeholders. Write complete actionable content. We need to count words. Let’s craft. First line: Title: Building Your Custom Pricing Model – Factors AI Considers (Brand, Rarity, Condition) Then blank line. Then HTML content. Let’s draft. We’ll need to count words. Let’s write then count. I’ll write in plain text then convert to HTML blocks. Draft:AI can speed up sourcing, but raw outputs need tuning for niche thrift resale. Start by feeding clear photos into an image‑recognition tool that returns brand, style, and approximate condition.
Next, pull recent sales data from platforms like Poshmark or eBay for the identified item. Most AI pricing assistants give you a median comp price based on the last 90 days; adjust the range to the last 30 days to avoid dead comps.
Apply the Core Formula
Use the simple equation: Final Price = AI Average Comp × Brand Multiplier × Rarity Multiplier × Condition Multiplier.
Brand Multiplier
Assign a tier: mass‑market (e.g., Hanes) = 0.8, mid‑tier (Levi’s, Nike) = 1.0, premium/luxury (Patagonia, Burberry) = 1.2–1.5. Multiply the AI median by this factor to reflect resale velocity.
Rarity Multiplier
Checklist for evaluating rarity: (1) Is the item a common basic (band tee, standard Levi’s 501, typical Nike hoodie)? → multiplier 1.0. (2) Does it feature a limited‑edition color, collaboration, or vintage tour print? → add 0.2–0.4. (3) Is it a dead stock or NWT piece with original tags? → multiplier 1.0–1.2 depending on demand. (4) If sales are few and low priced, the item may be rare but unwanted; keep multiplier at 1.0 and expect a longer hold.
Condition Multiplier
Framework for condition adjustment: Excellent (clean, no flaws) → 1.0; Good (light wear, minor fading) → 0.80‑0.85; Fair (visible wear, small holes, pilling) → 0.60‑0.70; Poor (stains, tears, missing parts) → 0.50 or less; New with tags (NWT) → use the full comp average (1.0) unless the brand tier suggests a premium.
Example Walkthrough
AI average comp: $85. AI brand tier: Levi’s is Mid‑Tier → Brand multiplier = 1.0. Condition: Excellent → Condition multiplier = 1.0. The shirt is a 90s tour tee with a local venue → Rarity multiplier = 1.3. Final Price = $85 × 1.0 × 1.3 × 1.0 = $110.50.
Practical Tips
Always filter comps to the last 30 days; older data skews the median. If the AI cannot see a faded graphic or missing button, manually note the flaw and apply an extra 5‑10% deduction. Keep a spreadsheet of your multipliers for each brand tier so you can apply them quickly across batches.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Niche Thrift Store Resellers (Clothing): How to Automate Item Identification and Pricing Research from Photos.
Now need to count words. Count everything after the title line? The title line also counts? Usually word count includes everything. We’ll count all words. Let’s count manually. I’ll copy text and count. Title line: “Title: Building Your Custom Pricing Model – Factors AI Considers (Brand, Rarity, Condition)” Words: Title:(1) Building(2) Your(3) Custom(4) Pricing(5) Model(6) –(maybe counts as word? The dash attached? We’ll treat as separate token? Usually word count splits on spaces, so “–” is attached to Model? Actually “Model – Factors”: there is a space before and after dash? In the text we have “Model – Factors”. So “Model” then “–” then “Factors”. The dash might be considered a word? Usually word counts treat punctuation as not separate. Safer to avoid dash or use hyphen without spaces. Let’s rewrite title without dash or use hyphen attached. Simpler: “Title: Building Your Custom Pricing Model – Factors AI Considers (Brand, Rarity, Condition)”. Still spaces around hyphen. Could cause extra token. To be safe, use colon and no extra punctuation that splits. Use “Title: Building Your Custom Pricing Model Factors AI Considers Brand Rarity Condition”. But that loses readability. Maybe we can keep dash but assume word count ignores punctuation. I think it’s fine. We’ll count words ignoring punctuation. Let’s count using approximate. I’ll rewrite the content in a plain manner and count using a systematic approach. I’ll write the final HTML and then count words using mental counting? Might be easier to approximate and then adjust. Goal 450-500. Let’s aim for ~470. We’ll count words in each paragraph. I’ll create a word count table. First, title line words: Title:(1) Building(2) Your(3) Custom(4) Pricing(5) Model(6) Factors(7) AI(8) Considers(9) Brand,(10) (Brand, with comma) Rarity,(11) Condition(12) So 12 words. Now HTML content words. We’ll go paragraph by paragraph, stripping HTML tags. Paragraph 1: “AI can speed up sourcing, but raw outputs need tuning for niche thrift resale. Start by feeding clear photos into an image‑recognition tool that returns brand, style, and approximate condition.” Words list: AI(1) can2 speed3 up4 sourcing,5 but6 raw7 outputs8 need9 tuning10 for11 niche12 thrift13 resale.14 Start15 by16 feeding17 clear18 photos19 into20 an21 image‑recognition22 tool23 that24 returns25 brand,26 style,27 and28 approximate29 condition30. 30 words. Paragraph 2: “Next, pull recent sales data from platforms like Poshmark or eBay for the identified item. Most AI pricing assistants give you a median comp price based on the last 90 days; adjust the range to the last 30 days to avoid dead comps.” Words: Next,1 pull2 recent3 sales4 data5 from6 platforms7 like8 Poshmark9 or10 eBay11 for12 the13 identified14 item.15 Most16 AI17 pricing18 assistants19 give20 you21 a22 median23 comp24 price25 based26 on27 the28 last29 9030 days;31 adjust32 the33 range34 to35 the36 last37 3038 days39 to40 avoid41 dead42 comps43. 43 words. Heading 2: “Apply the Core Formula” Words: Apply1 the2 Core3 Formula4 => 4 words. Paragraph after heading: “Use the simple equation: Final Price = AI Average Comp × Brand Multiplier × Rarity Multiplier × Condition Multiplier.” Words: Use1 the2 simple3 equation:4 Final5 Price6 =7 AI8 Average9 Comp10 ×11 Brand12 Multiplier13 ×14 Rarity15 Multiplier16 ×17 Condition18 Multiplier19. 19 words. Heading: “Brand Multiplier” => 2 words. Paragraph: “Assign a tier: mass‑market (e.g., Hanes) = 0.8, mid‑tier (Levi’s, Nike) = 1.0, premium/luxury (Patagonia, Burberry) = 1.2–1.5. Multiply the AI median by this factor to reflect resale velocity.” Words: Assign1 a2 tier:3 mass‑market4 (e.g.,5 Hanes)6 =7 0.8,8 mid‑tier9 (Levi’s,10 Nike)11 =12 1.0,13 premium/luxury14 (Patagonia,15 Burberry)16 =17 1.2–1.5.18 Multiply19 the20 AI21 median22 by23 this24 factor25 to26 reflect27 resale28 velocity29. 29 words. Heading: “Rarity Multiplier” => 2 words. Paragraph: “Checklist for evaluating rarity: (1) Is the item a common basic (band tee, standard Levi’s 501, typical Nike hoodie)? → multiplier 1.0. (2) Does it feature a limited‑edition color, collaboration, or vintage tour print? → add 0.2–0.4. (3) Is it a dead stock or NWT piece with original tags? → multiplier 1.0–1.2 depending on demand. (4) If sales are few and low priced, the item may be rare but unwanted; keep multiplier at 1.0 and expect a longer hold.” Let’s count. Checklist1 for2 evaluating3 rarity:4 (1)5 Is6