Rob & Melissa from Flea Market Flipper interview Casey and Liz from Freeway Flippers about reselling from the road.
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Reseller Hangout Podcast Interview W/Freeway Flippers
Rob: What's up guys, super excited today to talk to Liz and Casey, Freeway Flippers, excited to hear about their business and what is going on in their world. So, thanks guys. Thanks for jumping on here and joining us for today's episode.
Casey: Definitely. Thanks for having us.
Rob: Awesome.
Melissa: Of course. So let's just start. Give us a little bit about yourself, like your background, how you got started in this reselling flipping gig. We want to hear about it.
Liz: So we're Liz and Casey. Right now we live in Apache Junction, Arizona, which is east of Phoenix. We met out here and Casey for a while, was working as a catastrophe adjuster and it just wasn't working for us. So we decided that the best thing to do would be to find something for me to do on the road while he traveled.
And he would travel 21 days at a time. So there were times where we would only be together for maybe seven days and then he would have to jump back on the road. So you can only imagine him coming back and having the seven days, but really he just wanted to rest. So I was like ready to go out and have fun and maybe put him to work and do some yard work.
And that just wasn't going to happen. So he actually found reselling through Reezy resells, and first was Amazon. And that really was interesting to us because we wanted something I could do while traveling in any city. And I would travel. We kind of did a test run and I would go [00:02:00] with him. One of the places was Denver, which there's lots of Goodwills.
I would go there. I would scan books. I would ship everything out of the hotel room. And that was something that we started and I discovered that that was a profitable way to make money. So then we decided to sell everything in Tempe, Arizona, our house, and we hit the road and full-time RV'd for a year and a half.
And that was kind of what started our reselling.
Casey: Yeah. Hence the name freeway flippers. That's how that got started.
Rob: That is so cool. For sure. So give us a timeframe on how long, when did you guys start? How many years ago? Like when you were traveling and doing the flipping on the road.
Casey: So I was, I started like in the insurance industry right out of high school.
So I was doing that like a little over 20 years at the time. So as Liz mentioned, my last few years as in that position, I was a catastrophe adjuster. So what that meant, I meant I was 21 days on the road in a row, and then I would come home for seven. So. About 2017 after I had been doing that for like two years, I finally, you know, sat Liz down.
I'm like, look, we need to find some way that you can make some money on the road with me because we were not living together. You know, our lives are separate and you know, we've got a long, long life ahead of us. We don't have any kids. So it was pretty lonely, you know, living out of hotels, you know, that length of time.
And then like Liz mentioned, I'd come home for a week. And before I knew it, I was back out on the road. So it was 2017. I started listening to YouTube and podcasts. So I'd put a YouTube channel. Because I would be on the road for like 10, 12 hours a day at times, and then just started soaking it up.
Liz: It was five years ago.
Casey: Yeah. Yeah. I was familiar with eBay. I had started way back in the late nineties, kind of dates us a little bit, but, my mom worked at the post office. She was a postmaster and she mentioned like, you know, a lot of people are coming in with this eBay thing. You know, and one of her biggest things is she regrets, not, you know, investing like 10 grand, right.
When they became public back in the day, you know, back in the late nineties, but either way, so I, I was starting to just flip little things. There was actually like a down comforter, a store, not too far from where I grew up in Southeast Iowa. And they would get like Calvin Klein. It's a big name comforters that maybe had some stitching, little messed up.
And we were grabbing those things for like $20-$40 and selling them for $150-$200, you know, when, back when down comforters were like a huge thing that came out. And so I was familiar with flipping in general. Just, you know, I went into a career full-time right out of high school, so I didn't stick with it.
But then when I heard this Amazon thing, you know, on YouTube, As Liz mentioned with, Reezy resells, he was a big book flipper, and I was like, you know, that's something that's easily scannable. You can make a buying decision really quickly.
Liz: They're low cost of goods.
Casey: Yeah. Low costs of goods. You can put it in a box, ship it into Amazon and boom.
They can start making some money. Well, you know, you can stay busy while I'm out and about doing my job and, you know, it would give Liz something to do. So, yeah, that was 2017 when we got started.
Melissa: We have people ask us sometimes, can you do this from the road? I mean, you go, yes, you can.
There's different ways that you can do it. I'm curious how you did the shipping supplies. Did you have to just go, did you keep some with you or did you have to go out of the hotel like every day or?
Liz: Yeah. I mean, I had a crate that I kept, you know, the scale and tape and scissors and box cutter, and we kept some boxes.
Otherwise I'd just run to Walmart and, you know, it was part of our built-in expenses. We just knew we were going to have to pay for them. Or sometimes at the hotel, I would ask them if they had boxes and, and utilize their boxes. But it was so fun to do because I would go out to Goodwills and [00:06:00] I would come back.
You know, a car load of books and I would get the little cart from the hotel and people would look at me so strange, cause I'd have all these books and I'd have all these bags. And we started doing RA with Ross too, as well and Walmart on the road. So that wasn't just books. You know, we kind of shifted into, you know, doing retail arbitrage as well.
Casey: But it was mainly, I mean, Liz was doing mainly Amazon.
We weren't doing really any eBay on the road. So I mean to store inventory, you'd have to. You know, I think it would have to be something that's very consistent that sells and very small. I mean, we did see some eBayers when we were RVing. And they would have like trucks with, you know, truck beds covers and just have all their, excuse me, all their inventory in the truck bed, whether it was t-shirts or, you know, whatever was light lightweight, they could, excuse me, pack tightly.
Liz: There was a couple that they mainly, you know, they niched into jewelry because it was small and it was easy to store.
Casey: And they would do flea markets and eBay, you know, you meet some pretty eclectic people when you're out.
Rob: I bet. That's cool. Yeah. I was just going to say fast forward. So what are you guys into right now? What is the majority of paying the bills or, you know, what is your hobbies or you know what I mean?
What are you selling the majority of right now?
Casey: So we have two private label, Amazon businesses, that with private labeling, I don't know if you interview any of the folks that do that as well on your channel. But with that, you actually buy directly from the manufacturer, you trademark a brand, you logo, you label it the whole nine yards, and then you bring that to market, which we again started in around 2017 with that.
So we've been building that up over the last four to five years now, five years, I guess time does go by quick, but, you know, those two brands combined, we do, a little over half a million in [00:08:00] sales, about $600K to $700K in sales a year on that.
Rob: Wow.
Casey: Our margins differ depending on if we run sales and depending on what the freight is, you know, at that time, I mean, it's really took a big chunk of our margins in the last year, but we're still profitable enough to, you know, give ourselves distributions and take care of bills.
Melissa: You don't have to touch the product on that?
Casey: No, no, we have a warehouse here. So when we first started, we were just sending everything directly into Amazon. We never saw it at all.
Liz: And we did that from the road. We did that when we were RV'ing full time.
Casey: Yeah. Which worked out great, excuse me. But as it became more popular, you know, more competition would come in on any given product.
So. Amazon because there was so much coming in at the time because it was like, you know, it became a popular thing. So their warehouses got stuffed pretty quickly. So they made the decision. And I think it was quarter [00:09:00] 4, 2018, where they increased their, their storage, for Q4. And we weren't really prepared for that.
And we got hit with like a $12,000 monthly storage bill for one month. And we're like, holy smokes. Didn't pay attention to that email from Amazon, you know, notifying that, oh, if you don't get your stuff out, this is what's going to happen. Or really understand that, you know, going from, I think, 30 cents at the time to $235 or whatever it was.
Yeah, it was a big chunk, so definitely learned our lesson. So we have a local warehouse here that we do keep stuff in and then as we get our shipments, we store it here and then send it in, in chunks, you know, as needed. So we don't get hit with the large storage. Yeah. So we have that. And then we've been growing the eBay business now for about a year and a half.
Liz: Okay. Yeah, we always did eBay and, and now we're, you know, it's been about a year and a half Casey left his W2 job about a year and a half ago. And that was when yeah, woo, yeah that was when he joined me full-time. But we really didn't take it that seriously, or like really go all in until, about a year ago when we had a business venture fail. That wasn't fun, but you know, you live and you learn and you move on and you know, now we're eBay full-time and we really enjoy it.
Casey: Yeah. Yeah. We ended up, we bought into a business with some friends of ours. And didn't know one of the partners and unfortunately the personalities didn't mix. So it was like we owned a 33 and a third of it. We were able to sell to them. So it wasn't a complete loss, but it was unfortunate because we were really looking forward to the product and helping the company grow.
And so we were pretty excited and then it went to disappointment within a couple of months.
Liz: That was right after Casey left his W2 job. So we were banking on that along with everything else that we were doing. And then when it did, I mean, that was kind of a punch in the gut.
Casey: Yeah, that was supposed to be like what we were going to spend the majority of our time with and everything else was just kind of icing on the cake, running in the back.
But it put, you know, the reselling into the forefront for us, which actually there's was a blessing. I mean, part of what we love about it, obviously we get to work together. But just the time freedom, you know, of what we can do with our day is, is huge. You know, working for the W2 corporate life for 20 years, you don't get those luxuries.
You know, and for me, I saw, I worked for a fortune 100 company, lay off employees that were working 25, 30 years for them without blinking an eye at a rapid pace where it was like, holy smokes. Like we really do not matter. You know, and then now you see what the market, and, you know, I feel really bad right now for anybody that just went into retirement with what's going on with [00:12:00] them, with the market.
But so we just sat back and were like, let's just diversify where we, you know, do our business. So we do Amazon, we do eBay, we've got into print on demand, you know, YouTube.
Liz: And we have a rental property too.
Casey: Oh yeah, we do have a rental property. So that was another thing that helped us with the decision or myself with leaving the W2.
We were able to qualify for a rental property out here that we were able to purchase. So once that happened, you know, it was like let's move forward and put our head down towards reselling and working together.
Rob: That's awesome.
Melissa: I feel like there's a lot of similarities and it's so funny because I'm like, we were kind of pushed into it full-time too. We had to like, make some decisions and it was the best thing, hindsight, like it was scary during the time.
Rob: It doesn't feel good at the time. That's for sure.
Melissa: It doesn't, but then you figure it out. You're like, okay, well let's do this. Let's make it happen.
Casey: So yeah, once we got to figure it out, like it's not, I mean, we can make, we can make it work out here.
It was just putting in the time and effort.
Liz: And it's also like retraining your brain to like, not depend on a paycheck and think of it like as a day check and like how much you would make per day to be able to live. And that's kind of the mindset that ours has changed to.
Melissa: Yeah.
Rob: I think that's a great point because that is what a lot of people are.
They're working for that paycheck. And when that paycheck goes out of the picture, it's like, oh crap, what am I, what am I going to do? You know what, it's that false and like you said, it's that false sense of security. You can work for a company for 20, 25 years and without a blink of an eye, it's like, okay, see you later, go find a new job.
And that's scary. That's scary to me as well.
Casey: Yeah. A lot of people didn't have a backup plan and then we're stuck going to another job that, you know, most of them didn't like, but it was, you know, they had no choice. So, you know, I didn't want to have that, you know, that faced me down the road. So, absolutely.
Melissa: So I have a question of, you guys working together. So are you together pretty much 24/7 now, like working together?
Casey: Close to. I mean, we definitely, I mean, Liz's, family's in town and her sister live here, so, you know, they get out and do their thing. And obviously we do things separately with friends, but we're together a bunch, you know, after RV'ing for a year and a half, I mean, if, if you can do that, you know, this feels like such a huge space anymore, you know. So, yeah, but she usually works like we have an out building here where we store everything and that's kind of her space and then I'll work in here. So we kind of, one, we can get a lot more done at four separately listing and just kind of head down, you know, go into town type of deal.
Otherwise it's easy to start talking about ideas and getting distracted and whatever else.
Liz: But yes, we are together.
Melissa: Ideas. What are those? Wait. No, that's him all the time. Like no I'm [00:15:00] focusing, I'm focusing. Got to get this done.
Rob: Yup, for sure.
Melissa: I, it is, I guess you had the RV that really helped you probably get into this together, working together, because it took us a little while to get used to working together, being together all the time.
Like it's a different dynamic than going somewhere else and coming back.
Casey: So yeah. Yeah. Like my old manager, he was great. And some of my coworkers are like, are you sure? Like how could you do like full time all, all, all day, every day? You know, we like each other, so it's really not that bad, you know,
Melissa: Do you have any tips ready for couples that work together? Any, kind of on the spot.
Casey: I would say, like I had just mentioned, make sure you guys do have a separate workspace, so you can at least, you know, get some time apart, you know, whether it's, you know, she can listen to her own YouTube and podcasts. I listened to mine and then we can come together and be like, oh, I just heard this and you should listen to it.
And, it helps us keep diversified in that sense.
Liz: I would add though, that we have different strengths you know? So it's finding like what we're good at. Like, I do not like photographing jeans. I would like Casey to photograph all of them. But it's just, you know, finding the things that we're good at.
And just playing on those strengths and you know, it is a different dynamic when you work with your spouse full time. I mean, we have to get along. We have, I mean, it's, you know, it's just one of those things where you have to make it work and you learn different things about each other's, you know, your work skills are different than your personality in a marriage.
Rob: For sure. Melissa tries to, like, in our relationship, she's better now. She's a lot better, but she would try to tell me of deadlines and stuff that needed to get done.
Melissa: We gotta get these done. And like, this is what we gotta do. Like, are you done?
Rob: And I don't have a boss for a reason, and I don't need my wife being my boss on telling me what needs to be done.
So yeah, we're totally opposite. Yeah. But you're a hundred percent, right. Yeah. On, you know, find those strengths, really play into those strengths. And that helps us a ton as well. We've realized it, but it does take time. You guys know it too. It takes time to really feel that stuff out and work through it.
So great, great, great tips.
Melissa: That's so awesome that you get to work together. Like absolutely love that our schedule together.
Rob: Allows us to do it for sure.
Melissa: Yeah. One thing that you said earlier too, that when you were learning this whole stuff, that YouTube and podcasts, I think that is so valuable. And instead of just listening to the radio, when you're driving, you're turning on a YouTube channel and you're turning on and a lot of people don't do that and you can learn so much so quick from there's so much information out there.
Casey: So I think YouTube, I mean, is to me better than college, because you can really hone in on whatever you're interested in and dive in deep for, you know, again, when I being on the road three weeks at a time, I had nothing but it. So I can understand, you know, a lot of people working full time or having a nine to five and potentially having children on top of that.
You know, it's hard to fit in an hour, maybe two to really educate yourself on some, some of those channels. But I think it's kind of shifting now to where it's, you know, shorter videos that are getting people's attention, you know, because we're all kind of glued to our phone, a lot, most of us, but you can learn a lot from most platforms, podcasts included.
And for me it was just, you know, it took, I can't remember it, but you know, you hear one thing and it makes the light bulb kind of go off in your head and you go, hmm. That could maybe work and let's see if it does. And then when it does and you prove it to yourself, it's like, well, if I can do that, then I know I can do this.
And then it just snowballs into a belief system in yourself. And the process, and that's why I, I always encourage people to try to fit in some time to educate yourself on whatever it is you're interested in, whether it's reselling or woodworking or whatever, because there's a lot of information out there.
Rob: For sure. For sure.
Melissa: When you were back, when you first started kind of in the dabbling in it, on the [00:19:00] side, when you were doing books at the hotels and stuff, what was that as a side hustle? So what was kind of an average income for as a side hustle then back in the day?
Casey: That's a good question. I mean, I remember, you know.
Melissa: I'm just curious.
Casey: I remember posting screenshots where we were starting to do like $300 days and kind of getting excited about that because the margins with books, you know, are pretty high, you know, usually 40%, 50% on some of them.
So it was like, you know, at Liz, barely doing this and areas that we don't know, you know, we're making more than a hundred bucks a day. You know, and like Liz mentioned kind of thinking of it as a day check versus a paycheck, you know, we're selling books on Saturdays and Sundays, you know, even, you know, so.
I don't know. I just remember being excited when it was starting to get to like $1,500, $2,000 a month. And I would say we got to that point within five to six months of doing it part, like part time.
Liz: The fees weren't as much, storage wasn't as much. I was a preschool kindergarten teacher for 10 years. So it did not take long to replace that.
So, unfortunately, but yeah, I mean, I remember seeing $3,000 months, I mean, that was gross profit. It wasn't.
Casey: It wasn't sales. That's the deal with books again net over a thousand to $1,500 a month for Liz barely doing it. No, that's not a full-time income, but I knew if we got back here. I mean at the time, you know, Reezy resells was doing like $600K in sales, just doing books.
And he lived like in the coast of California where, you know, we live here in Phoenix, there's resources for all sorts of reselling stuff. It's a huge hub for, I don't know, there's warehouses everywhere. Like there's Goodwill. So many Goodwills estate sales, garage sales, or maybe we are lucky in that sense.
Liz: You cannot physically, you don't have enough time in the day to go to everything. That's why everyone's like, why are you sharing the information on your YouTube channel? Why would you do that? People are going to see that. Good luck.
Casey: Like, I mean, for eBay that's so random with the products and stuff like that, you know, if any of like wholesaling stuff, you know, we don't share like most of the resellers, if you get something that's consistent, that's kind of a bread and butter product then.
Yeah. You know, I get not sharing that you don't want 10 other people or a hundred other people coming in on that. Cause then it just kills it for everybody. But, like with the eBay channel, It's just so random.
It's random.
Liz: I mean, what's the chances that you're going to find exactly what we're finding.
Melissa: For sure.
And that kind of goes to like a scarcity mindset versus an abundance mindset too. Cause we've heard that before too, like, well, why are you sharing it, then everybody's gonna be doing it. Like there is people throw away and get rid of so much stuff.
Like there is so much stuff.
Rob: More resellers.
Casey: Some of the stuff we see it's like, who would donate this? Like. You know, but I know, I mean, that goes back to like the YouTube and podcasts.
One of the biggest things that has helped us is like one educating ourselves, but getting surrounded by other people and the same mindset. Cause you brought up mindset.
I mean, that was another thing for me that, you know, in the corporate world was never really talked to or talked about. It's more of, you know, just get stuff done and let's try to find the fastest way to make money. Whereas when we got around people in the reselling world, there was a lot of talk about mindset.
Liz: Well, and reseller meetups. We went to Puerto Vallarta for Kevin David who's big into private label.
Melissa: Okay.
Liz: And then now crypto and everything has kind of moved on from that, but we, you know, we're around other very successful people. And that was like the first time where we were really surrounded by people who were more entrepreneurs.
I mean, everyone else that we really hung out with, they were all W2. Like, you know, you just moved up in your company and you'd, you know, constantly we're working towards that.
Casey: Yeah. I mean, it was like, I don't know, in the corporate world. It's like, it seems like a 3% raise is consistent with all of my friends, no matter what industry it is.
And it's like, if you can get four or five, you're like, or even four, it's like, great. And if you don't do well, you get two. And it's like, I dunno, it's so minuscule when you break it down per day, it's like, okay, this person is getting literally 58 cents more than per day. Like great, good for you. You know, I don't know, but yeah, the, the reseller or the entrepreneur mindset I should say was, was refreshing to be around.
And it really helped push me to get to a point where I could leave the W2 and feel okay about it and put it in the rear view. And here we are.
Rob: Awesome. Yeah. Mindset is huge. A hundred percent. I mean, if you're surrounding yourself like Melissa, I mean podcasts, we do a run every morning. We go out and get exercise.
Absolutely.
And it goes back to investing in yourself, investing in your mind, investing. I mean, pouring into yourself with other successful people.
Melissa: Instead of listening to the news and all that negativity everywhere.
Rob: Absolutely. So that is so awesome.
Melissa: Being around people who lift you up instead of complaining all the time.
Casey: Yeah. Yeah. I mean, and that's like with Facebook, for example, I mean, kind of are, I dunno, I feel like our generation is one of the last ones to kind of get onto it and stick around. Cause I know the younger ones aren't. It is pretty draining. I mean, I like to go on there for marketplace. We use it for our business.
But it's easy to like, not be on marketplace and then start scrolling through your feed trail.
Liz: It looks like, what am I doing? I just wasted like 10 minutes of my life I'll never get back, and reading nothing that was of value.
Melissa: Yeah.
Casey: Yeah. But I, yeah, it's a, it can be very negative very quickly. So yeah, we try to try to stay out of that stuff as much as we can.
Melissa: You guys have given a lot of great stuff already, but what is something that like, if somebody starting out, what would be a couple of tips you would tell them, like, to get, to start out with?
Liz: In terms of reselling?
Melissa: Reselling. I mean you've oh, sorry, yes.
Liz: Reselling. I mean, I would, I mean, if they're interested in it, I would you know, just absorb as much information as you can on YouTube and really learn like from the beginning, like, how do you start?
What do you need? What supplies do you need? You know, where can you go to find inventory? And then really, I mean, look around your house. You know, and, and find like five items. I mean, really you have to, it's a lot more work than people think. They think, oh, wow. Look at these people. They just bought it and they sold it.
How easy is that? They don't see everything that goes into it. So they don't see, you know, the time that you spend photographing listing, you know, shipping. Going to the post office or, you know, wherever you have to drop it off. So I would say really learning how the process works, test it out with five to 10 items around the house and see if it's something you're interested in.
And then from there, just keep learning, you know, one or two new things a week, whether it's, you know, how you can ship clothing or, you know, how you can, I don't know, title your. Your eBay listing or, you know, things like that. It's just constantly learning.
Casey: Yeah. Yeah. I would say the biggest thing is just a consistent, a lot of people that I've met that have tried to get into reselling, you know, give it like a month and they're like, ah, this isn't working.
But they're really not trying that hard. As far as you know, there isn't algorithm with everything like companies want to see you listing. They want to see you interacting with customers. They want to see, you know, you lowering prices. If you've had something sitting there with no views, you know, so you just have to be active and everything that you're doing, whether it's a YouTube channel or whether it's selling on eBay or Amazon, just stay consistent with.
That's a challenge for myself with our, our YouTube channel. For sure. I mean, Liz is constantly like, let's do it. You know, I'm just not super comfortable in front of the video yet. I'm getting better. But you guys do a great job with it. So, you know, thanks for inspiring us.
Melissa: On YouTube either. That's been, our hard part is consistent on YouTube.
Rob: The other platforms you do, but YouTube is a little bit harder for, so, but I love them. Those are amazing tips, consistency and learning, always being out there learning so you can better yourself. Amazing tips. Definitely. Anybody can use those for sure.
Melissa: And so I love that you guys have diversified your income, where for reselling, or is it kind of 50, 50 Amazon eBay right now? Is that where you're putting your energy?
Casey: Probably more like 70 Amazon, 30 eBay. You know, we're right now, we've we float between 900 to a thousand active listings on eBay. We've got probably, I dunno, 500 to list.
Liz: Oh, everywhere in the house. Like we're on the couch on the dining room table, like in the office area, in the outbuilding, in the garage. You walk in and you're like, these people resell.
Casey: Well, they kind of went on a stretch where we bought a lot for two weeks and then list a lot for two weeks and it quickly snowballed into like money piles.
But, you know, we'd like to get up to like two to three, like 2,500 active listings is kind of a goal of ours to get to by this fall. I think we can handle that pretty easily with still shipping consistently and that'll get us more money to, you know, continue to do what we want to do, which is time, freedom, and kind of doing what we want.
Right. So we have a goal to increase the eBay business. We've had a goal to increase our print on demand business. Again, I struggled to find time to do that only because it can be pretty monotonous and kind of boring to think of designs, design them, and then upload them, you know, and maybe one out of 10 might actually sell in 90 days and make you any money.
And then it, so it's just more of a different process, a different mindset that you have to get behind. Although we've definitely known a lot of print on demand people that started when we did with resellers. That are kicking butt on print on demand. I'm like, ah, that would be so nice to be bringing in like, you know, 10, five figures a month on print, on demand.
Liz: But then you're dependent on one right now.
Casey: But you know that, I just liked that idea because of the no inventory thing. Of course, you know, they, pick it, print it or print it, ticket, shop, ship it, whatever it is versus, you know, the work behind emails. But you know, we enjoy it. So let's work. Yeah.
Rob: We laugh at you because Melissa just told me yesterday.
I mean, our house is the same way I bought and stuff. It's in the chair, it's on the table. It's all in these places that I don't have listed. So I can totally relate to what you guys are feeling. And we have a warehouse as well, and I'm mostly like, get everything out of here. Let's get it to the warehouse and get it out of the house.
I like taking pictures in the house. I like doing that kind of stuff. And then put it in our house. Totally can relate to that's cool.
Melissa: But then tomorrow you'll probably go to the flea market.
Rob: And yard sale day.
Casey: We're really trying not to do that.
Liz: And we were like, let's go to the grocery store and Casey, he's like, oh look, there's a Goodwill.
I was like, no.
Melissa: It's hard to say, no, it's in your blood.
Rob: It's hard. Well, Casey and Liz, thank you guys so much. This has been amazing. We've had so much fun with you guys. Let us know everybody. Who's listening to this, let them know how they can connect with you guys, how they can learn more about these amazing tips that you've already given away.
Let people know how they can connect with you.
Liz: So we do have a YouTube channel Freeway Flippers, and then we're on Instagram. We have a website. And we have a Facebook page as well. So it's just Freeway Flippers.
Melissa: Awesome. We'll those in the show notes below, for sure.
Rob: We'll have them on the show notes, you guys can go that way too. So you guys thank you so much. This has been so much fun with you guys. We can totally relate. We're very similar. Totally relate with you guys, but thank you so much for jumping on here and giving us a little bit of your time.
Casey: Yeah.
Liz: Thanks for having us. And I'm glad that we're not alone.
Casey: If you have time in Phoenix, reach out.
Melissa: We'll have to hook up for sure.