In looking at the auction I would like you to consider one thing. Items with a reserve price should be flagged as such. I beleive if a item has a reserve price that should be disclosed up front. I make my bids based on how much money I have to spend at that time. If I am bidding on a big ticket item, I will not bid on other items due to that. If I know the reserve has not been met I would continue bidding on other things.
Personally, I think the first bid on a item with a reserve should be the amount that meets that reserve. If a item has a $5000.00 reserve and you get 6 bids that amount to $3000.00, or you get no bids at $5000.00 you get the same result. The item does not sell, the auction makes no money and the seller gets the item back. If you get one bid at the reserve amount everyone gets what they want. I think it is the most honest way. I get no pleasure out of bidding on a item then at the end being told it did not met the reserve, especially when I did not know it existed.
The only other way I think it could be done is to flag the auction as a reserve. Proceed as normal. Let bidders enter a ceiling bid that would allow the auction house, at the end of the auction, to raise the bid to the reserve amount, if that amount is not met. If you have more than one person entering reserves it would advance normally.
I think the easy way is the best, make the first bid the amount that will buy the item. At the least we need to know a item has a reserve. Maybe I think different that others. I am interested to hear everyone elses thoughts on this.
Roger
Personally, I think the first bid on a item with a reserve should be the amount that meets that reserve. If a item has a $5000.00 reserve and you get 6 bids that amount to $3000.00, or you get no bids at $5000.00 you get the same result. The item does not sell, the auction makes no money and the seller gets the item back. If you get one bid at the reserve amount everyone gets what they want. I think it is the most honest way. I get no pleasure out of bidding on a item then at the end being told it did not met the reserve, especially when I did not know it existed.
The only other way I think it could be done is to flag the auction as a reserve. Proceed as normal. Let bidders enter a ceiling bid that would allow the auction house, at the end of the auction, to raise the bid to the reserve amount, if that amount is not met. If you have more than one person entering reserves it would advance normally.
I think the easy way is the best, make the first bid the amount that will buy the item. At the least we need to know a item has a reserve. Maybe I think different that others. I am interested to hear everyone elses thoughts on this.
Roger
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