Posts Tagged ‘lot purchases’
As a result of the downturn in the economy, many events are finding it more difficult to get auction donations. In many cases the number of donations has declined, or the quality of some of the donations has declined. Still wanting to fill their auction with good lots, many events turn to consigned auction items as a way to round out their auction.
Do your research before adding consigned auction lots to your auction. In many cases you can get better deals on your own, if you are simply willing to do the legwork. In other cases, a lot that makes sense for an East-coast auction may not be well-suited to a West-coast event. These days many hotel properties are struggling to stay at capacity, and are willing to make deals if you deal direct. But in many cases, you don’t have to look very far to find ways to do better than the consignment companies.
One such example is Winspire’s
“America’s Cup Stars & Stripes Experience in San Diego 4-Night Package with Airfare for Two” which they value at $5,618.00 and sell to events for $1,750.00.
The package includes round-trip coach airfare from anywhere in the U.S. on American Airlines, four nights at Hyatt Regency Mission Bay Spa & Marina, and a 150-minute sailing experience on Dennis Conner’s Stars and Stripes. The first time I encountered this lot, I thought the value must really be in the sailing experience. Not so.
Anyone can sign up to sail on the Stars and Stripes for $99 per person. You need to be willing to do your research and book your trip yourself. Given that Stars and Stripes offers gift certificates, it means you can secure the package without having to book the date for your winning bidder.
The Mission Bay Hyatt? I managed to find suites available at $239 per night at the height of the season. So far, this $5,618.00 package has an actual cost of $1,156.00 before taxes. Actual cost is probably closer to $1,260.00 after California takes its cut.
So the difference in value that Winspire brings to the table on this particular lot is in the airfare. Two round-trip tickets on American to San Diego for $500 is a bargain if you are coming from New York city. Cross-country flights on American to San Diego cost an average of $500 per person. If you are a New York school putting together an auction package, this lot makes sense for you.
However, Bay Area auctions would be remiss to purchase this lot based on airfare, for myriad reasons. Foremost is the fact that American doesn’t fly direct to San Diego from San Francisco. Any flight on American to San Diego would require a trip to Seattle, Chicago, or Dallas first - resulting in a 9-hour flight. The other major factor is Southwest, which flies non-stop between SF and San Diego multiple times a day, for an average of $120/person, round-trip.
Furthermore, a surprisingly large number of auction lot winners never actually redeem their lots. One event we asked to track the data reported that 45% of their winning bidders did not redeem their getaways purchased in the live auction.
The vast majority of consignment houses require that you purchase the certificate as soon as the auction is over. If your bidder doesn’t redeem the trip before the expiration date, the consignment company keeps the money and your event is out the cash. We discussed this with the Gavel Group at their inception, and they refuse to budge: A buyer’s lack of redemption is their pure-profit.
Over at Winspire, Jeff Cova is more understanding and will often work with winning bidders to extend the deadline. He’s not out to sell vapor, and is more interested in people actually redeeming their trips since he has to buy them from the various airlines, hotels, etc.
The major issue with this is that when one of your donors doesn’t redeem a trip the consignment houses make a profit. A profit that your bidder assumed was going straight to your cause when they made the bid and then opted not to take the trip. When you consign an item to your auction there is no viable way around this, and it is a risk you have to be willing to take. Some auctions opt to include the actual costs of the items they are paying for in the description. It certainly sheds a new light upon a lot when donors know how much of the money is actually going to the charity - I’m not 100% certain that light is favorable.
One other big package being offered at the original writing of this post was a trip to theĀ 2009 Super Bowl XLIII in Tampa. It included a 3-Night Stay and First/Business Airfare for Two at a cost of $19,000.00 to the buyer. Included in the package were round-trip, first class airfare on American, three nights at the Ginn Reunion Resort, and two tickets to SuperBowl XLIII.
The Ginn Resort was, as of the original writing, offering villas for $279 per night, with many still available. SuperBowl Tickets had hit a 15-year low at that point, and were currently reselling for as low as $1,500.00 per ticket. The same section the consignment houses was offering were currently at $1,800.00 per ticket. Total cost to this point if you wanted to put it together yourself was: $4,437.00, not counting airfare (anyone want to hit the SuperBowl next weekend?). If you were to simply sell this package on your own, without airfare, you’d immediately save $15,000.00 off of what the consignment houses wanted to charge you.
To be ultimately fair to the consignment houses, I opted to research first-class flights, less than one week from the date of flight. American Airlines wouldn’t quote a fee, but I found unrestricted first-class on United for $1,600.00 per person. Meaning that you could put that package together for $7,637.00 on your own - at a savings of more than $11,000.00 off of the consignment house’s price.
Jeff Cova will point out that one of the main benefits of working with Winspire is the fact that they are experienced concierges: they will take care of your buyers, period stop. And the last thing you want are unhappy bidders, especially unhappy bidders who have spent significant amounts of money on prime auction packages.
To make matters worse, there are auction companies out there that purchase lots from consignment houses and then resell them to auctions for a significant profit. One auction house offers the Stars and Stripes package to events they work with for a cost of $3,000.00. I know because one of my clients hired them to do a silent auction, and this other firm “offered” to consign a Stars and Stripes package for $3,000.00 into the live auction. My client agreed before doing any research on the lot (or turning me loose to look it up). When I compared the write-up the firm provided me to the .pdf available on Winspire’s web site, they were exactly the same, word for word.
I understand the need to make your auction better, and encourage you to follow our guideline of 1 to 3 when spending money on an auction lot. In today’s economic environment there may be even better deals to be found out there than the above examples, which were researched solely online. A quick phone call to the Hyatt in Mission Bay, for example, may yield significant discounts, and nothing trumps interpersonal relationships.
The point being, if you have to pay for auction lots do your research. Make an honest evaluation of your crowd and the lots available. If an auction lot being offered for consignment seems over-priced or too good to be true, it probably is. But if an offering and price-point map well to your crowd and fill a much-needed gap in your auction, no-one will blame you for bringing in some professional help.
