Jos salter should at least try and sell things first in canada.If it dosent sell in 2-3 months he can ship it south.
if you guys want to have a good cry, you should watch delta-niner on ebay, he will be selling a huge Canadian estate . maybe you will even put the money out, instead of just mouthing off.
As a professional auctioneer, that is not in the business of selling firearms, I would like to address the auctioneer sitting fat comment. Auction staff are mostly part time help. To get help that is knowledgeable, you have to pay them a premium for the sporadic nature of the work available. If you don't compensate them well you get staff that customers complain are stupid or unhelpful.
Next is the facility rental. If you are in a building all the time there is constant rent, if you are an occasional auction you have to pay the premium for occasional use facilities. Next is the advertising. Good advertising is expensive. Forums such as these and like minded forums are available, but hosting your own site, or taking adequate pictures/providing accurate information is a huge investment in time. If you do it poorly, people won't come to bid. Bid callers come in all shapes sizes and specialties. If you are skilled at your trade, you deserve to be compensated for it. Next time you feel the need to complain about the buy/sell fees, count the people that are helping you or those around you. The hourly cost of actually running the auction, plus the cost of the preparation, plus the time between auctions. Now the direct marketing data base is what the seller is really paying for. Having a list of qualified buyers is the biggest factor in choosing an auction company for the commodity you are selling. I hope that puts a little perspective on it. When I started there were never any buyers' premiums. The increased cost of print advertising, and hall rental/real estate has caused auctioneers to add them.
This wasn't meant as a rant, but rather a defense of an industry that has treated me well over the years. Auction, the only method of marketing that allows a vendor to achieve more than their initial asking price.
Not looking to pi$$ on the non-gun auction industry. Just a personal observation of a large (1200+ lots) consisting of mainly firearms that sold at what most would call stupidly inflated prices. Skim a minimum of 25% off the top and hand that to the auctioneer.....I pretty sure operation costs were covered pretty darn quickly. Staff working regular shop hours to catalogue and one sunday spent selling. Plus, in the Landesdowne case half the employees are family I believe. Hey good on'em for raking it in. I'm just not going to be one of the sheep in the crowd.As a professional auctioneer, that is not in the business of selling firearms, I would like to address the auctioneer sitting fat comment. Auction staff are mostly part time help. To get help that is knowledgeable, you have to pay them a premium for the sporadic nature of the work available. If you don't compensate them well you get staff that customers complain are stupid or unhelpful.
Next is the facility rental. If you are in a building all the time there is constant rent, if you are an occasional auction you have to pay the premium for occasional use facilities. Next is the advertising. Good advertising is expensive. Forums such as these and like minded forums are available, but hosting your own site, or taking adequate pictures/providing accurate information is a huge investment in time. If you do it poorly, people won't come to bid. Bid callers come in all shapes sizes and specialties. If you are skilled at your trade, you deserve to be compensated for it. Next time you feel the need to complain about the buy/sell fees, count the people that are helping you or those around you. The hourly cost of actually running the auction, plus the cost of the preparation, plus the time between auctions. Now the direct marketing data base is what the seller is really paying for. Having a list of qualified buyers is the biggest factor in choosing an auction company for the commodity you are selling. I hope that puts a little perspective on it. When I started there were never any buyers' premiums. The increased cost of print advertising, and hall rental/real estate has caused auctioneers to add them.
This wasn't meant as a rant, but rather a defense of an industry that has treated me well over the years. Auction, the only method of marketing that allows a vendor to achieve more than their initial asking price.




























