Are
Penny Auctions A Scam Or A Bargain
Author:Richard
Austin
Are Penny Auction a scam or a
bargain?
Conceptually Penny Auction sites are very smart money makers which will
probably be only gaining more popularity, or notoriety in the future
10 ways Penny Auctions are Different than EBay's
Bids cost from .60 to $1.00 each
The site admin controls supply and demand
Product price increases .01 cents per bid / to .10 cents per bid
Products start at $.01 to .10
Placing a bid at the last second resets the timer 10 to 20 seconds
'Bid Butlers' can be used to automatically place bids within certain
price ranges.
Bid butlers not allowed in nail biter auctions
If another bid butler matches your bid butler's price range all bids
are automatically placed and auction time is extended significantly
(usually) as all those bids add 10 - 20 seconds each.
beginner auctions allow you to compete with only people who haven't won
an auction
One auction site toppennyauctions offers several options that are much
different from the traditional penny auctions. toppennyauctions along
with the buy it now option also offers a bid til you win option (
members with paid bids get to bid on auctions and if the member fails
to win the auctions the bids are returned to that members account until
such time as the member has won an auction ) this option does not apply
to the nail biters or non profit auctions.
Speaking of non profit auctions toppennyauctions also offers a free
service to registered non profit or charitable organization. All
proceeds minus the cost of the item being auctioned is sent directly to
the Non profit.( No administrative fees or deductions )
Verdict: Penny Auctions are not a
Scam and Definitely not a Bargain
These Auctions make too much money using gambling psychology and
marketing. It doesn't need to do anything illegal to add icing on the
cake, its profits are already enormous. While it can be profitable to
setup bots that bid up the price until a target is met, penny auctions
can do this legally by Google ad bombardment of certain products and
keeping the supply of products low most penny auctions have a limit to
the auctions There's no real way to know for sure if they have any
shady methods, but in my opinion they're already making too much money
to risk anything stupid that might arouse suspicion and lead to a PR
disaster.
It should be noted the question isn't how much the penny auction site
make on any particular item, rather can you actually win an expensive
item for the cost of a dollar ? The answer is yes. Just because an item
costs 5 hundred dollars at a retail store and there are 900 bids ( at a
dollar each ) doesn't mean squat. The last bidder to make the one
dollar bid wins the item and that's that. Sure the others lose but the
winner sure isn't about to complain, such is the case with lottery
tickets. When you purchase a ticket and do not win, you may feel bad,
but the next day your back at that counter buying another ticket or two
right.. People seem to be fixated on how much the site is making and
losing site of the fact that not matter how much the site makes there
are winners and as such there are going to be losers.
Logical Pitfalls
There's several ways you can fail at these auctions Understanding these
5 points should increase your chances and make your expectations more
reasonable.
Pitfall #1: Gambling psychology
Penny auctions are a modern, more aggressive implementation of the
dollar auction which is designed to make logical people waste an
irrational amount of money. Most auctions have a big red 'last 10 to 20
seconds' countdown flashing hundreds of time before the auction ends.
Most of the time on items that are worth something: many people lose, 1
person wins. Like gambling, people are much more likely to remember how
many times they almost won or won rather than all the times they lost,
getting hopes they'll learn to play the system or if they did something
just a little bit differently it will lead to success. If a person has
submitted a majority of their bids, and they only joined the site to
buy a particular item, it may seem logical to continue bidding more
than the item is worth just to try and avoid having to buy more bids or
risk a clean start with few bids on another auction. It's easy to not
think clearly when you constantly have a resetting big red flashing 10
second count down. Pull away from the page when you need to think about
something and don't act until you're completely sure. Calculate the
cost to risk analysis and be aware of how many people are bidding. Lurk
if you're a new user.
Pitfall #2: Sold for Only $x! I
should have bid
Many higher price items sell for low in the case of a single bid
butler. Single bidders get scared away when their bids are instantly
beaten over and over again with a depressing amount of bids being
thrown after repeated countdowns. Just because it sold for a low price
doesn't mean you would have won at that price. Many of the people that
setup bid butlers are just hardcore ebayers that resell the item. $10 -
$15 resell profit will suffice at minimum and at that rate they can
afford have hundreds of bids on some of the upper priced items. Other
people don't want to use bid butlers while one is already active
because it can eat several dollars instantaneously depleting your bids
and increasing the auction time to unreasonable levels to where more
single bidders can track it and join at a later time. To kill a bid
butler you hurt yourself and let the single bidders gain an advantage.
Be the first one to throw one out on an auction set to end near 3 in
the morning and you might just be lucky.
Pitfall #3: Cheapest bid package +
bid smart
Be ready to waste a ton of bids and money if you want to even try to be
successful on some of these sites is basically a rich man's game rather
than a poor man's opportunity. The advertising speaks for itself,
"Entertainment Shopping" not "Bargain Penny Bids". Though there's a few
lucky people, wasting $20 - $100 on bids and not winning anything
should be taken lightly, because that will be the case for a majority
of new users. If that's not something you can do then probably penny
auctions aren't for you. Bidding at the last second multiple times
tends not to help. In fact, sometimes the server lags out and you'll
get an auction ended even if you bid a couple of seconds before the
end. Sometimes the timer displayed on the browser isn't perfectly in
sync with the actual ajax time, also the latency of how long their
packets take to reach you can severely hurt your timing and ultimately
expectations. If your plan is to bid at the last second, the only bids
you might be getting in will be losing ones if the server is slow and
or the latency is bad. It takes about 300 milliseconds to get data back
after a request. If the server is slow then maybe 500 milliseconds - 1
second. Compound that if your connection is slow or you're far from
their server. The average human reaction time is about 200
milliseconds. You can try to time your click exactly but that's not
quite how it works. When your competing with other people instantly
beating their bid is more depressing than letting them 'almost win'
(last sec bid). People with limited means trying to get a one time
bargain on something in particular will be disappointed. Ebayers and
craiglist resellers that play the system and will be satisfied even
with minimal returns are the type that will ultimately gain the
advantage and profit the most. The terms and conditions make it clear
no resellers are allowed, but why else would many of the winners keep
buying the same console systems over and over.
Pitfall #4: Cheap Beginner Auctions
Beginner auctions often have junk items listed price being around $20.
( but not all sites are alike, Swoobug, ubids,bidcactus are among the
few with decent items )Those items tend to sell for $5 on amazon or
walmart, which is the price the site will charge just for shipping.
Even when higher priced items like a wii or xbox 360 become beginner
auctions, there's so many people that haven't won anything that it
usually matches the prices of the regular auctions.
Pitfall #5: Bidding for bids /
product competition
Most penny auctions limits supply of items and keeps the quantity of
users super high through constant adwords bombardment, more often of
consoles, cameras and apple products. For that reason you're more
likely to win a $1200 refrigerator cheaper than a $170 nintendo DSi.
There's a lot more people searching online to order a console than to
get a massive fridge by mail. Many users probably join for the single
interest in a particular item. One item all bidders have a demand for
is more bids leading to some of the most retarded wastes of money you
won't see anywhere else Here's the worst: 300 Bids sold for $77.45
penny auction. When it's a penny auction just take out the decimal in
the price and that's how many times people voted. That's right, 7745
bids on an auction selling 300 bids earning $5808.75. But again whats
the point, the winner most likely spent $20.00 in bids and won . Here
is a worst case senario, a LCD Flat screen TV selling a best buy for
$2000.00 is up for auction and you are in the market for such a TV. You
spend $1200.00 to win the TV, did you win or Lose. Well you didn't get
it for a buck but you also didn't go to Best Buy and shell out 2 grand
either.. People tend to look at how much the auctioneer made rather
than how much of a bargain they got.
Generalities
Bid Butlers win about 56% of the time. Since many auctions are nail
biter auctions
the bid butler success rate is probably higher.
The average price an auction ends at is $38
Including bids the winner pays an average of $66
The average amount earned per auction is $437, not deducting the price
of the item. This is a bit unfair but suggested retail price is not
reliable in assessing their actual costs.
118 is the average number of bids the auction winner puts in where end
price > $100
Nailbiter auctions tend to sell for more.
The people that have won many auctions tend to use bid butlers most
often
Bid butlers definitely have a huge success rate for the Wii, but it's
not for the faint of heart .Day of the week and hour of the day do not
make a statistically significant difference. In general the earlier you
get in the game the less chance you have of winning, unless you're the
lone bid butler on a fairly unpopulated auction. Get in late and you
pay more but waste less in bids and have a better chance of winning.
Remember Your win is many people's loss. But again does the winner
realty care? Think about this on your way to the store to purchase your
next set of lottery ticket or scratch and wins!
try visiting these sites and compare the products offered and options
to win and see for your self
bidstick.com
bidcactus.com
toppennyauctm
bidrodeo.com
biddz.com
rockybids.com
# # #
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/online-gambling-articles/
are-penny-auctions-a-scam-or-a-bargain-1772349.html
About the Author
We are a penny auction site offering
Name Brand items for auction at an almost 95% savings from retail store
prices. A most significant difference between swoopbug and most other
auctions is we deliver all our merchandise from our own warehouse..
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