How many silent auction items do you need?
MENTIONED IN THE VIDEO Auction Item Guide: https://www.redappleauctions.com/free... ==================== ABOUT THE COMPANY Red Apple Auctions provides entertaining fundraising auctioneers and valuable education to Gala Chairs overseeing schools and nonprofit auctions. Our most popular free download is our auction item guide. Auction planners use this annually updated guide each year to secure fresh ideas for procurement. Get it at http://www.RedAppleAuctions.com ==================== ABOUT THE VIDEO HOW MANY SILENT AUCTION ITEMS DO YOU NEED? In a silent auction, the long-used metric has been to offer one item for every two “bidding units.” What’s a bidding unit? A buyer. The payer of the item. Let’s say that Julie and Dan Smith — a married couple — attend your event. They will be bidding as one entity; they aren’t competing against each other in the auction. They are on the same team. Consequently, they — together — are considered a ‘bidding unit.’ In contrast, I work an auction whereby everyone who attends is single. A “bidding unit” at that auction is one guest. If your event attracts individuals (e.g. golf tournament auction, a bachelor / bachelorette auction, a "single and mingle" event), your best number of silent auction items is determined in this way: Number of guests / 2 = your best number of auction items for silent If your event attracts couples (e.g. sit-down dinner galas, school auctions), determine your ideal number in this way: Number of guests / 2 = Number of bidding units. Number of bidding units / 2 = your best number of auction items for silent (In this post I’m using the term “auction item” as equivalent to “auction package” — or what some annoyingly call a “prize.” To use more accurate benefit auction grammar, I should refer to these as auction packages — not auction items –as multiple items might be grouped into a singular package.) Auctions are based on the economic Principle of Scarcity, and one item per two bidding units creates scarcity. Ignore this principle and you’ll find that you can procure more and more items, and raise the same or less money than if you had fewer items. Not what a busy Auction Chair wants to hear, right? I had a school client a few years ago reduce their silent auction by 100 items and raise the same amount (or was it a bit more?). Less work … same money. In a post-pandemic environment when it's harder to procure silent auction packages anyway, this metric might be music to your ears.

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