Showing posts with label Dean Hanley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dean Hanley. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Dean's Book Reviews on Amazon


by +Dean Hanley
We would like to Thank each and every one of you who have supported Dean’s books.

Dean’s books “Before There Was Bubble Gum: Our Favorite Pre-World War I Baseball Cards” and “The Bubble Gum Card War: The Great Bowman & Topps Sets from 1948 to 1955” are top rated sellers under the “sports cards” category on Amazon.com. These books are available in both paperback and eBook form.


We appreciate everyone that has taken the time to read this book. We always enjoy and appreciate reading customer reviews and feedback. For all that have read his books, would you please be able to take a few minutes to leave a review?



 To review one of Dean's book click on one of the links below. This will take you to the books sale page. Scroll all the way down until you see a box that says "write a customer review". From there you will be able to leave a book review.




















To Review "Before There Was Bubble Gum: Our Favorite Pre-World War I Baseball Cards” click here. 


















To review "The Bubble Gum Card War: The Great Bowman & Topps Sets from 1948 to 1955” click here. 















Please click here to return to Deanscards.com

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Preparing For The National Card Collectors Convention

Dean's Cards is currently scheduling appointments to meet with sellers at the NSCC show.  Dean and his gang will be in Chicago for 2011 National Card Collectors Convention on August 4th and 5th and we are looking to buy just about any card from 1869 to 1969.

With over one million vintage cards for sale, Dean’s Cards sells more vintage cards than any other dealer.  To do so, we must buy a lot of cards.  Dean’s Cards buys over 500 vintage collections each year and is looking to add to that number in Chicago this summer.

What you may not know is that we do not set up a booth at the show and buy collections by appointment only.  In order to book an appointment to sell your collection in Chicago please email orders@deanscards.com or call us at  (513) 898-0651.

We look forward to meeting with you in Chicago. 

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Dean Hosts Bronson Arroyo at the Green Diamond Gallery


Last Thursday, Dean got the chance to sponsor another Green Diamond Gallery event, this time featuring Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Bronson Arroyo. Dean got to introduce Bronson, who has been with the Reds for the past six seasons and won at least nine games each year. Bronson got to talk about his time playing for the Boston Red Sox and winning the 2004 World Series. He also showed the audience how to throw one of his famous curve balls and even got to sing and play guitar. Dean said he thoroughly enjoyed the stories about the current Reds team and pitching staff.

The next day, Bronson started the game against the St. Louis Cardinals, and, although he didn't get the W, the Reds won in extra innings.  Please click here to view our entire selection of Bronson Arroyo baseball cards.  Click here to read about Dean's previous Green Diamond Event experience hosting Dave Parker.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Dean's Cards Featured in the Business Courier

A business he loves is in the cards





Imagine surrounding yourself with baseball cards all day. Tons of cards. Hundreds upon thousands.

That’s the life of Dean Hanley.

Dean Hanley
Dean Hanley has more than 850,000
baseball cards available through his online store.
He left his job in 2000 after 10 years in the software industry. Tech firms were cutting like crazy, and he had to find something else.

A collector since childhood, Hanley was searching online for cards to fill out a season’s set. Not finding many, he started Dean’s Cards – just him and his dog in his basement.

His company, which now has seven employees, has moved twice and operates out of a 3,000-square-foot space in Oakley. But it isn’t a typical baseball card shop.

There’s no walk-in retail business. The office, in a light industrial area, has no real card displays, just a few cards on the walls.

But behind the facade is a treasure trove. Hanley has more than 850,000 cards indexed and for sale at www.DeansCards.com.

Being a tech guy, using a Web site to sell was a natural. Hanley figures he has the largest vintage-card inventory online. “The Internet is the great middleman,” he said.

Taking an actual middleman out of the equation and avoiding the costs of a retail shop allow him to save money so he can buy and sell at better prices than others can.

Starting a business is a daunting task


“You have to have a product that’s better, faster or cheaper than the next guy,” Hanley said. “I knew marketing, and I knew baseball cards.”

At first, friends were skeptical.

“I was the laughingstock of our little village,” the Mariemont resident said. “People would say, ‘He’s selling baseball cards, for God’s sake.’”

It didn’t seem like much at first for a guy with an MBA. His wife, who also has an MBA, gave him two years to be able to support the family. They had small children, and she planned to stay home after that.

Hanley made it by first taking a modest income out of the business. Sales have surged 40 percent a year until this year.

Revenue is down about 25 percent this year, but he’s not disheartened. “Hopefully, this is a little bump in the road,” he said.

Industry insiders: probably is just a bump


Baseball card collecting has slowed overall. But the vintage part of the market – mainly pre-1980s cards – in which Hanley does most of his business is holding up, said T.S. O’Connell, editor of Iola, Wis.-based trade publication Sports Collectors Digest.

“The vintage end appears to have withstood a slowdown in the economy,” O’Connell said. “The last 18 months, we haven’t noticed the huge softness you would have expected.”

Hanley focuses on the customer, who mainly wants orders shipped correctly and quickly. He ships them out the same day the orders come in, tens of thousands of cards a month.

The cards in his shop are almost unfathomable. The oldest is an 1887 tobacco card, which is how baseball cards were delivered back then. The most valuable is a 1909 Ty Cobb card worth $5,000. He has 1933 Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig cards.

Then there are the other memorabilia. Cards make up about 85 percent of sales. But Hanley also has every issue, ever, of Sports Illustrated. He has a batch of old issues of The Sporting News. Stacks of “Who’s Who in Baseball” guides. He has media guides, yearbooks and old sports magazines.

Source: http://cincinnati.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/stories/2009/11/09/story22.html