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#1
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Posted By: scgaynor
Admittedly this topic is self serving, but what do consignors want from an auction house? |
#2
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Posted By: Anthony
1. Not changing rules, software, format or premiums after the item is submitted |
#3
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Posted By: Dan Koteles
accurate descriptions and 10% buyers premium "MAX". |
#4
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Posted By: Joe
I would like lower buyer premiums. Also for consignor, don't puff up the item at unrealistic price. Consignors will be disapointed. |
#5
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Posted By: barrysloate
Hi Scott- good question, and since I am sitting on the same side of the desk as you, I can offer a different perspective. |
#6
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Posted By: Joe D.
There are some items that I have that I know would have to go to an auction house one day if I ever wanted to part with them. |
#7
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Posted By: scgaynor
Joe, quoting unrealistic prices has always been one of my pet peeves as well, because if you can't deliver, the consignor is going to think that you didn't do a good job. I have always thought it was best to be a little conservative with estimates, but sometimes you lose things that way too, especially to those who don't know what they have. |
#8
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Posted By: scgaynor
Joe D. |
#9
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Posted By: leon
Good points. I too think a 10% commission on the buyers side is a little unrealistic. Heck, even back in the day it was often 15% or more, though the items might have sold for a buck or two. As for a catalog I think it probably helps on the price on bigger items. I know when I get a catalog and I can see a picture, and read through the book, it might make me bid a little more on something I want. I am sure I am not alone at looking at catalogs while watching TV, checking out the library |
#10
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Posted By: Sean Coe
1. Communication- I hate sending something to an auction house and then once it arrives never hearing anything. Let me know what you think the reserve should be, how it will be described etc.. |
#11
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Posted By: Joe D.
On point 1) |
#12
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Posted By: Eric B
If you sell a lot of 30 cards, show pictures of all 30 cards! Simple enough. Don't show just 10 of them. We understand that it takes time to add pictures and you don't want to delay an auction. In that case start with the first 10 and add the other 20 during the auction so it's there 5-10 days before the auction end. This one is directed to Mastronet mostly. It sure would have solved the problem when they list more items than they end up delivering. |
#13
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Posted By: Joann
On catalogs - from buyer's view, not consignor's. |
#14
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Posted By: JK
Doesnt Lew Lipset still run his auctions with only a 10% buyers premium? If so, its not impossible. Regardless, 15% is about the max that should be charged - 17.5% - 20% buyers premiums are based on pure greed in my opinion. |
#15
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Posted By: barrysloate
Scott- With regard to whether people would prefer to speak to an auction house, or feel intimidated by it and prefer an online form, will vary with each person. Some consignors are outgoing and like to talk cards; others are shy or busy and would prefer not to have to deal with lots of telephone banter. So I don't think you can generalize, everybody is different. |
#16
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Posted By: MVSNYC
2 main priorities: |
#17
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Posted By: scgaynor
I am glad that I started the thread, it is educational. I would have thought that the #1 concern would have been lotting and I am surprised by the emphasis on the catalog. |
#18
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Posted By: scgaynor
MVSNYC. |
#19
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Posted By: barrysloate
Michael- any auction house will gladly do 0% to the seller for a really great item; but I am not sure a PSA 9 common warrants a half page or a PSA 10 warrants a full page. As Scott said, most people will go online anyway to look at the pictures; even in a small auction like mine you can go online and blow up pictures to fit a full computer screen. You might have a tougher time negotiating that part of it. |
#20
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Posted By: MVSNYC
97% of the bidding comes from online? that seems to be a huge number, i would think less...i am old-fashioned and prefer calling and placing bids by phone and speaking with a human. |
#21
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Posted By: barrysloate
I fully understand the value part of it; but I would want to delegate a half or full page for something a little more eye-catching, such as a poster or display piece. After all, despite the condition, these are common players that nearly every collector has seen before. I understand your desire to show it is valuable, but if your PSA 9 took up a quarter page, do you think you would get a nickel less for it? |
#22
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Posted By: scgaynor
Sorry Barry, I didn't realize that, I was not trying to "out" anybody. I was just trying to say that the reason that there are 17.5-20% buyers premiums is that it costs alot to produce catalogs, especially when handing out 0% seller commissions. |
#23
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Posted By: MVSNYC
"if your PSA 9 took up a quarter page, do you think you would get a nickel less for it?"... |
#24
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Posted By: barrysloate
Scott- I actually share your opinion, and I've often thought "what if I do away with the printed catalog and just do a website?" But I do fear some people will miss the auction entirely. Nevertheless, when I sell on ebay, everybody sees it. I'm sure you are amazed at the endless number of new bidders you find online. However, ebay in its current state is a flawed product that carries a lot of extra baggage. |
#25
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Posted By: barrysloate
Michael- I agree presentation is important, but let's take a hypothetical situation. |
#26
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Posted By: Joe D.
first let me say I completely disagree with your contention that printing a catalog is 'extremely expensive to produce'. To the contrary - I would suggest that it is extremely expensive to not produce a catalog. Take the catalogs away from Mastro and I would bet anything that the reach is not the same, the interest is not the same, and the ending prices are not the same. Spread all of those incremental increases in bids across an auction - and the catalog pays for itself and then some. |
#27
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Posted By: MVSNYC
barry, i really do believe how you present a lot (size, prestige, description), will have an effect on hammer price. if it is too small, you are saying to the genreal public, this item is LESS important, thus less valuable...if you make it a full page, great description, and really "ham" it up...you will garner more bidding... |
#28
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Posted By: leon
Not everyone uses a computer too often, even in todays world. An "only online" auction can miss someone. |
#29
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Posted By: barrysloate
Don't you think by making the N167 lot #1 I am letting everybody know how important it is? If I placed it in the middle of the catalog next to a T206 Rube Marquard I agree I would be selling it short. But to answer my question, do you think I will leave money on the table by having two lots instead of one on the first page? You or anyone may answer it, I can take the heat (and please note I present all of this in the spirit of board discussion). |
#30
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Posted By: Alan
Scott - |
#31
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Posted By: scgaynor
Joe, I have never really priced it, but lets be conservative and say that the cost to produce an catalog with 1500 lots is $100,000 ($50,000 of that is shipping costs). If the prices realized are the same with the catalog or without (as has been my experience), why bear the expense of the catalog when it costs $5000 to produce a postcard or a bit more to produce a pamphlet. The catalog is still part of the business today, but I see a change in the near future in its usefulness. If you look at the newspaper and magazine business, they are scrambling to develop their websites as there is less interest in printed matter, they can be updated in real time and it is cheaper. I can't predict the future, but I see the same thing in the future for the catalog auction. |
#32
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Posted By: barrysloate
Scott- you can get two people to duke it out at the end of a catalog sale, but you are also very familiar with the beauty of the double snipe on ebay! |
#33
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Posted By: warshawlaw
1. Communicate In A Business-Like Manner: I am stunned at how unprofessionally some auctioneers handle communications with consignors, potential consignors, and potential bidders. A real simple thing do to is to return calls and emails within 24 hours of receipt, or have a very good reason for not doing it. I try like heck to do that in my practice. An old maxim I once heard is "I called you, I didn't hear back, I hired somewhere else." Second, be level-headed and professional with everyone. You never know whether the guy looking to sell the cruddy collection you won't touch might know someone who has a gem to sell. Some auction house employees tend to forget that everyone is part of the general public. Trash talking is not acceptable. Third, be professional in person. I find this especially interesting at shows, where I have seen auction house reps engage in a variety of obnoxious or mildly disgusting behaviors. This is the public face of the company; eat your friggin' nachos at the snack bar and don't greet potential consignors looking like the comics guy from The Simpsons. Third, don't BS me; unless you know who I am don't spew a load of unsubstantiated crap about your consignments. My favorite last year was the guy from one auction house who tried to convince me that some very common British boxing cards were really rare and valuable. |
#34
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Posted By: barrysloate
Adam- couldn't you at least open up a little and tell us what you really think? |
#35
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Posted By: scgaynor
Barry, sniping is a beautiful thing, but my guess is there are alot of people who get outsniped that think "I should have gone higher" and given the opportunity to bid again, they would have. |
#36
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Posted By: Joe D.
Scott, |
#37
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Posted By: barrysloate
I realize on ebay you run out of time if you have a change of heart, but I have had some miraculous "last ten seconds" there. Of course, the typical sale is pretty much at market level. |
#38
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Posted By: barrysloate
Joe is right, you need both. It is possible that some of these massive catalogs might get a little smaller, since you can access a razor sharp image of any lot on the website. But to eliminate it entirely- I just wouldn't do that. |
#39
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Posted By: scgaynor
Joe, I don't think that having a catalog helps me remember the auction any better than a postcard or a reminder e-mail. A perfect example is the Huggins and Scott auction the other night. I had every intention of placing bids, I even had the catalog on my desk next to my computer, but I ended up getting caught up in other things and completely forgot about it. I mentioned this to somebody else the next day the they responded with "Damn, that was last night? There were some lots I wanted to bid on too." Obviously he forgot just like me. |
#40
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I would consign to an auction house that realizes good prices, has a good reputation |
#41
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Posted By: David Vargha
I consider myself pretty Internet savvy, but 1,000-1,500 pages of REA or Mastro catalogue is much easier to browse in hard copy. Even on a high speed connection, opening up several hundred lots is a task. Oftentimes the websites aren't very easy to navigate to go back and forth between lots. In a catalogue I can also quickly rifle through the sections of little or no interest to me. Also, in hard copy format, I sometimes will spot things that I bid on that I didn't even know I had interest in until I saw them. Finally, I am unable to drag my desktop system into the bathroom during "reading time". |
#42
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Posted By: Joann
I think it's fine if some of the smaller auctions don't publish cataglogs - if the entire online offering is less than 12-15 pages it's no problem to go through them all. |
#43
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Posted By: fessgreg
as far as lots that will go for 25k or more i think they should be in the front of the catalog with a full page. if your printing a 200 to 500 page catalog then whats a few more pages. i've seen REA show hi priced lots in the middle of the catalog and i think its a mistake(at least they were full page ads). also if you put a high priced item in the middle of the catalog with a 1/4 page ad people might think there is something wrong with it(trimmed,etc.). as far as buyer's premiums of 20% i've heard of six figure lots being consigned for a + 10% of hammer. so that's were you get 20%. let's face it small lots don't generate a lot of money,big lots do. signed greg |
#44
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Posted By: Jim Clarke
What's Important in an auction company to me. |
#45
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Posted By: scgaynor
Jim, #9 sounds interesting. Please expand on that a bit. |
#46
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Posted By: barrysloate
JC- you make good points, but having up to six auctions a year would be really difficult for most auction houses. It takes time to gather material, and to produce a catalog, and I think that's one area that would strain most companies. |
#47
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Posted By: Joe D.
Perk. |
#48
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Posted By: barrysloate
Joe- that's a very good idea, but isn't that the same as knocking a few points off the seller's fee for a large consignment? Or is there a psychological advantage to be awarded some of this mad money to spend in the next sale? |
#49
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Posted By: JimB
"I think that the auction world is trending away from the catalog. 97% of the bids come online anyway." |
#50
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Posted By: davidcycleback
My opinion is that the best way to maintain consignors is to treat them well and do a professional, effecient job. Descriptions, payment, questions answered, etc. Consignors are more likely to consign their stuff to the place that did a good job last time, and are likely to recommend that auction house to follow collectors (both as consignors and bidders). The best way to get a consignor to go somewhere else and to not recommend the auction house is to do do a bad job-- not pay, be a jerk, etc. |
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