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Follow on Google News | Penny Auctions Comparing apples to oranges at swoopbug.comWhat is the difference between the standard penny auctions and swoopbug.com penny auctions
By: swoopbug admin if the member choses to end the auction and purchase the item, any bids the member has made is applied to the purchase price of the item.( so the member still takes no loss) and quite often the purchase or buy it now prices is much less than what the member would have paid in a retail store.. the member is also rewarded for the bidding process by getting free bids just for participating. Swoopbug has done all possible to make sure the member has more than a fair chance at winning an auction. For example, an auctioneer might put a $100 gadget up for auction in a system that charges $1.00 per bid. Each bid increases the auction price by $0.10. Let's say that the starting price of the auction is $1.00, and that the final ("winning") bidder manages to acquire the gadget at the price of $25.00. To get from $1.00 to $25.00 in $0.10 increments requires 240 bids. Each bid cost each bidder $1.00. Thus, the auctioneer has collected $240.00 for the bids, plus $25.00 for the sale of the item, for a total of $265.00. Assuming the auctioneer paid $90 for the gadget, the gross profit is $175.00. However, it is unknown what customer acquisition costs are to run an auction so even those auctions that appear to have high profit may actually not generate a profit. The bidder who placed the last bid (for $25.00) has had to spend at least $1.00 for the bid, as well as the $25.00 to purchase a gadget which retails for $100.00. He may have spent more money on prior, unsuccessful bids. All the other bidders who have placed the prior bids have spent $1.00 for each bid they placed prior to the winning bid and came away with nothing material. In the last few years, there have appeared a number of successful sites operating on this model, which they usually call "penny auctions". Typically, consumer electronics such as cameras, laptops and MP3 players are sold. Bids typically cost 10-25c USD each(or 50p on Swoopo.co.uk, $1 on Winners24.com and up to £1.50 on MadBid.com in GBP),swoobug.com, each increasing the final value of the auction by 1-2c(or 1p), and extending the time of the auction by another 10 seconds or so. For example, bid4vouchers.co.uk sells bids for 50 British pence, raising the price by one penny. This means that any item which sells for more than 1/40 the RRP is a guaranteed profit. Any item which sells for the RRP is effectively selling at a 4,000% profit. Conversely, an item that sells for 1c is clearly a loss of whatever the site must pay for the item - it is generally presumed that the sites "drop ship" the items.[1] The most well known examples are perhaps Tenderosity.com, bid4vouchers.co.uk, bidray.com, gozila.co.uk and bidstick.com, with dozens now in existence.[2] While penny auctions appear to have much in common with lotteries and other forms of gambling, they appear to avoid being regulated as such. Bidrivals.com, for example, operates from Malta, provides a legal advice statement explaining why it is not a lottery Discounts for purchasing larger numbers of bids. The primary risk of the bidding fee scheme website is that it is misunderstood as a regular auction.[citation needed] Unsophisticated participants will not understand the distinction between a regular auction and a pay per bid auction, and so might apply poor judgment when participating. This has the secondary impact of polluting internet advertising with ads where a customer is unable to distinguish between regular stores or traditional auctions from pay per bid auction sites. As a consequence, the value of internet advertising and price comparison sites are diminished. For example, one bidding fee scheme site placed an internet ad that advertised "A New PS3 at $80.35,"[citation needed] deceptively implying that a new PlayStation 3 was available for anyone to purchase at that price. Bidding fee scheme sites also exploit the sunk costs fallacy that is endemic in the human psyche. The fallacy causes players to psychologically feel that the past progress of a bidding fee scheme game affects future behavior, thus biasing the player towards larger wagers. Some bidding fee scheme websites provide automatic agents that automate the placing of "bids". These agents are marketed in a way to make them seem comparable to the kinds of bidding agents (for example, PhantomBidder) Because bidding fee scheme websites exist in a legal gray area, there is little to no verifiable enforcement of rules.[citation needed] Much like any auction site, there is no protection from the practice of bid shilling, in which the auctioneer uses a puppet to place bids in his own auction. This practice is illegal in legitimate auctions, but is particularly nefarious in bidding fee scheme auctions.[citation needed] Due to the risk of shilling, even after the players have spent large quantities of money purchasing "bids" in the auction, the auctioneer can still deprive any of the players of a winning bid by placing an additional bid of his own. To protect oneself against the risk of such shill bidding, the best practice would be to use only reputable long-standing websites that disclose their management, investors or other details of the company.[citation needed] Those sites that do not readily divulge who is running the site, complete with contact information, should be avoided.[citation needed] Since the profit is made through bidding fees, the bidding fees are not refundable. Also, as with any other site, bidding fee sites can appear and disappear quickly so it could be possible for a bidding fee site to collect bidding fees for several auctions and disappear before awarding the prize.[citation needed]. In contrast, in August 2009, Swoopo began a "Swoop-it-now" Since the webmaster is the only one who can see the bids, it is also possible for the webmaster to bid on the item himself, which would be unfair to others but hard to detect. This would, however, be illegal and once again, bidders can protect themselves from this by only bidding at sites operated by long-standing reputable companies. # # # 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.. End
Page Updated Last on: Dec 17, 2009
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