How to Win on Ebay: Snipe 676
grammar fascist writes "A study by South Korean physicists confirms what some of us have taken for granted for a long time: a single bid at end of auction nets the most wins. From the article: 'Plugging all those data into the model and testing the outcome in terms of how the auctions turned out, the team found that the probability of submitting a winning bid on an item indeed drops with each bid. "Our analysis explicitly shows that the winning strategy is to bid at the last moment as the first attempt rather than incremental bidding from the start." The study appears in the current Physical Review E journal.'"
And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, there you have it...like most things in life, you gotta figure out what you want and how badly.
If there is something I really want, I've set my alarm to wake up just to bid on the item...and crash back again after it is over.
I see nothing wrong with sniping. If you have set your bid to the absolute maximum you are willing to pay, and not a cent more...if no one snipes it at that $$ amount...you will still win. If someone outbids your bid at the last second...well, in your mind you should say.."They paid too much for that..."
This works pretty closely to a live auction. People can keep bidding till the hammer drops. Sure, it keeps going while bids keep coming in, but, that is the little difference between eBay and a live auction. At least with eBay you CAN win and don't HAVE to be there live.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Interesting)
But the problem with this is that you never win the item. If you still just bid the one amount you're willing to pay, but you do it with a snipe, you're much more likely to actually get the auction item. Using a snipe program like jbidwatcher, it's just as easy to snipe as it is not to, so why wouldn't you?
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, let's say I feel like paying $20 and bid $20 early. Then some newbie retard (ebay is full of them) comes and says, "Hmm, that guy thinks it's worth $20, so I'll pay $25". Ok, I've now just lost the item. Alternatively, nobody bids on it and newbie retard says, "I dunno, I guess I'll bid $10, since maybe I'll get it real cheap". At the last second I can then come along and snipe my $20, and win the item. Same $20 top bid, but I lose on the first auction and win on the second.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why on earth do people bid over and over again, or wake up at a specific time? The eBay system is set up so you can put down the single bid you are willing to pay for an item. The automatic system does it for you. It doesn't show anyone what your maximum amount is; in fact the system is set up to the advantage of the buyer, because if I'm willing to pay $100 but the second bidder only bids $20, then the seller only gets $22 of what I was willing to pay and I keep the rest in my pocket. The problem with eBay is that people treat it as a conventional bid, believing for some reason that you should bid over and over again, just above the opposition. This is actually bad for the buyer, because it tends to draw people into bidding higher than they would originally peg as their maximum.
If you use the system as it is designed, then you cannot be "sniped". You can be outbid by someone who was willing to pay more than you, and it doesn't actually matter whether that happens a second after you bid or a second before the auction closes. If you're outbid, then someone was willing to pay more than you were; simple. However the masses simply do not comprehend this and continue bidding by the rules from another system, which are simply wrong here.
Sniping works against those who don't understand eBay.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
You bid $100. It shows as $12. A stupid kid comes along, and bids $15. Your bid goes to $17. The kid bids $20. Your bid shows up as $22. After a while the kid bids $80 and your bid shows up as $85. You win and get to pay $85. Or the kid bids $105 and you don't get the item.
Now if you set up a snipe shot of $100 for that auction, the same kid comes along, bids $15 and leaves happily seeing his bid the highest. You win the auction and get the item for $17.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Informative)
I often get no bids at all up until the last 30 minutes of an auction, when 10 or 20 can suddenly come in.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Au contraire. Regarding the final price, sniping only works if there are non-rational bidders. Rational bidders bid once and put in their (current) true maximum bid. Intelligent rational people do so at the last minute. If there are only rational bidders, sniping still provides a small advantage because you don't commit to an auction and can always switch to a different auction. But if there are also irrational bidders, the type of people who think that the maximum is a number that can be increased if necessary, then sniping also likely results in a lower price. Since the behaviour of these people depends on the other bids, not putting in your bid until right before the end means that you don't contribute to the amount that they're willing to pay. Since Ebay auctions are second-price auctions, their price is the price you're going to pay (unless another rational person outbids them), and every dollar that they bid lower is a dollar you save if you win the auction.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Informative)
`With any brains' is a bit arrogant, don't you think? (And yes, I know it wasn't originally your phrase.)
Ultimately, sniping works, because not everybody uses Ebay `in the optimal way'. If everybody did what you suggested, then you're right -- sniping would not help. But not everybody does this!
Ultimately, even those pe
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
No.
You just proved his point beautifully. You obviously don't understand what's going on here.
Yes, in a perfect world, everyone would proxy bid like they're supposed to, and nobody would pay more than they're willing to pay for an item. Moreover, the person who was willing to pay the most, would win the auction.
But that's fantasyland. In the Real World(tm), there are two reasons why you should always snipe to get the best deal:
Example: your max bid on an item is $50. DumbJoe has already bid $30, hoping he'll get it for that. You come along and bid your $50 well before the auction ends. The new high bid is set at $31 by eBay's system. DumbJoe is notified that he's been outbid, so in the heat of the moment, he comes in and bids $40. Again, your proxy outbids him up to $41. DumbJoe decides he's not going to let you beat him, so bids $51. Oops, you lose!
Now, let's redo that with sniping. DumbJoe sits as the high bidder at $30 until about 20 seconds are left in the auction. At that time, you place your $50 bid. Price goes up to $31, auction ends, DumbJoe has no time to get caught up in the bidding war. You get the item, and at a damn good price, too.
Let's say many sellers are offering the item you wanted for a max of $50. You bid on the auction that DumbJoe is bidding, and he gets into his emotional bidding war. He drives the price up to your max of $50 before giving up. You win at $50, which is what you were willing to pay. No problem, right? WRONG.
Meanwhile, another auction ends a few hours later, selling the exact same item for $32. Oops! You could have saved $15-20 by either sniping on DumbJoe's auction, or deciding that its price had gone out of line with what the market was paying on other auctions for the same thing. You could take your time and wait for a relatively low-priced auction about ready to end and snipe that. The savings could be substantially below what your maximum price is.
Moral of the story: ALWAYS snipe. Lots of dumbass snipe because they don't understand the proxy bid system. Other dumbasses don't snipe because they don't understand their competition.
thing is (Score:5, Insightful)
the result is they overpay for the item and you don't get it at all, the only winner is the seller.
sniping does not encourage this behaviour as by the time they see thier outbid its too late.
Re:That's partly because of our consumer-oriented (Score:3, Insightful)
eBay could fix this by a) having an auction extended by an hour if any bids come in during the last hour; b) not allowing anyone to bid during that last (extended) hour if they hadn't already bid at least once. This would tend to make people bid on an item earlier, which (since people are bidding irrationally) will tend to drive up prices, which will result in increased fees for eBay.
From the commentary in the USA Today article, they do acknowledge that sniping works because many bidders are naive or irra
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Interesting)
Yahoo! Japan already does something similar... I think its 15 minutes. Makes things much more fair for the seller.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Funny)
You either won the auction at the moment you placed your bid, or you lost. Until you view the auction results, both are true.
Oh yeah, also, you were bidding on a cat that was possibly gassed to death.
Fermi's Bid:
As long as your result is within an order of magnitude of the highest bid, you win.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Interesting)
If there's an item that you're willing to pay up to $10 for, you would probably still take it for $10.05. If it's one that's worth $10.05, you'd probably still consider it a pretty good deal for $10.10. That's where proxy bidding fails, because in the end, unless you enter a massively overpriced proxy bid, you're just going to be sniped by some other guy by 5 cents.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Then $10.00 wasn't really a maximum value was it? The fault would be yours for not bidding $10.05 in the first place. If you bid your absolute maximum amount on every auction, then when you get outbid you won't feel bad for losing the auction.
Works for me - I see something I like, then I bid my max and forget about it. If I get an email later saying that I won the auction, I go back and pay. I turn off those uselsss "you have been outbid" emails.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Insightful)
The thing is, even if one bids the absolute maximum one can pay, 10 cents more is still just 10 cents more.
Unless you happened to bid your entire economy on an item, you'll always be able to afford 10 cents more with no problem whatsoever.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Interesting)
The chances of it going right up to 12 and stopping are pretty unlikely. If you get it for less, you'll feel good about yourself. If you lose by 10 cents, then you're happy you didn't end up paying 12, since you weren't comfortable with that anyway. If you get it dead on 12, then it's a small loss - but it's the least-likely result. There'
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
True enough. However...
Sniping does get you bargains precisely because people don't put in their max bids. Try putting a test bid on an item that is just higher than the current high bid but lower than your max. Chances are the former high bidder will come back and outbid you again. If I was to put my max in early against such a person, he'd just bid up until hitting his max or until I was outbid. However, sniping against such a person can save some bucks. I just put my max in at the last minute/sec
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Interesting)
One other thing to consider is that some people may not feel comfortable putting in their true highest bid when they snipe, if they don't think they need to. So the last time I was in a snipe-war, I did double-sniping, with a reasonable bid at 10 or seconds so left, then my true maximum bid at 5 seconds or so left, already prepared in another browser tab waiting for a click on the "bid" button. I lost the auction, but that was because there were two snipers, one willing to pay way more than my absolute ma
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
And even if I don't save money, i'd rath
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Before you put in your first bid, you should know EXACTLY how much you're willing to pay. And then you NEVER go past that amount.
But then you lose the ability to gauge the market.
Let's say, for example, that there is some old game on eBay that I want to buy. I really want it, and I'd personally pay $500 for one to get my hands on it. But, from the eBay past auction history, I see that they usually sell for about $100. Now I don't know about you, but if I know something usually goes for about $100, I'd rather pay about $100 and use the extra $400 on something else. (See that? I would pay up to $500, if that was what they sold for. But, since they don't, I'd prefer to pay less.) I would hate to be the person who won one for $475 when the ones the week before and the week after went for $100.
So I put my early bid in at the average selling price, about $100. If I see the price go up to $101 and it's less than a few hours before it ends, I might bump it up to $110. That's still well below my maximum, but it's reasonable to me. If it goes up to $115, I might bump it up to $120. Or, maybe by then another one is listed, and I'll move to it. Or, I'll see that I'm bidding against 5-6 others, and so I'll pass this one up and wait for the demand to die down. I can't do any of those things if I start out with a bid of $150 - maybe I'd lose it, or maybe I'd pay $149 when five more were listed during the week - oversupplying the demand - at $100 each.
What you suggest - bidding the absolute bank-breaking max that I might theoretically be willing to pay - would only work if A) people couldn't get friends to bump up their own auctions, and B) eBay let me, at any time, adjust downward the proxy margin I had previously placed on an item, so that I could adjust for market changes, without any penalty like those associated with withdrawing bids.
(Why don't I just snipe? I rarely remember to go back and check the items at the exact time of closing.)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
If the dumbasses that got their auction "stolen" at the last minute didn't put in the absolute maximum that they wanted to pay for the item, then that's their own fault. Either your willing to pay more than anyone else or your not. If you don't put your maximum bid in straight off and keep incrementing your bid, you are really just engaging in really inefficient sniping.
Adding a ten minute extension wouldn't really solve this. It would work great for sellers because the emotionally invested bidders would run up their bids more than they otherwise would. The buyers however would be better off just joining the snipers rather than fighting them. If everyone sniped it would basically revert to the pre-sniping days.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Interesting)
But think about a real auction: If the auctioneer says "going once...twice..." the item doesn't just go to the person who threw up their paddle at the last moment. It gets extended for another five seconds or so. Now, maybe the same dynamics don't work in the web world, but at least it puts perspective into it.
What if eBay also had another auction type in addition to normal and Buy It Now ones: silent auctions. It tells you when it ends, the seller may optionally give a reccomended amount, and you get to put in your bid, without knowing what anyone else put down. Now you'd be more compelled to put your maximum bid down.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
You know, that really is how ebay should work. Would totally get rid of sniping for good.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Informative)
That is called a Vickrey auction [wikipedia.org]. It has some theoretical advantages but for various reasons never caught quite on.
(has some theoretical diasadvantages as well, such as the possibility of stable bidder cartels iirc)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Informative)
My sister actually has been part of a team doing academic research on auction results. They took a number of different auction models (11 or so, I think) and ran computer models and did real-world
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Interesting)
Standard English auctions, Dutch auctions, first price sealed bid auctions, second price sealed bid auctions all end up at pretty much the same price - they just get there by a different route. But English auctions (as well as second price sealed bid auctions) generally have the advantage of truthful revelation of valuation by the bidders.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you go into an auction without knowing the absolute maximum you will pay for the items you're bidding on, you're a damn fool who is going to get taken to the cleaners.
Chris Mattern
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
Your solution would certainly appear to be of benefit to sellers on the surface, but it would stike a blow against one of the main attractions
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
thing with the auction concept is you're SUPPOSED to bid what you'd like to pay if no one else is running up the price (rinse. lather, repeat) until you reach your wallet's limit. eBay's modification imposes a time limit to keep auctions from taking forever, but with the maximum bid concept it brings its 'auction' back towards the original.
the reason people snipe (vs. just bidding their personal maximum to start) is fear of being run up by shills. it's a survival mechanism for your money, if such a thing isn't self-contradicting on eBay...
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
eBay has certainly considered and rejected this idea. If this were an auction type offered on eBay, every rational seller would choose it.
The reason it's not offered is that eBay is more dependent on bidders than sellers at the end of the day. Yes, sellers pay the fees to eBay, but sellers are less mobile than buyers - if a seller is not going to use eBay, what will they use? No other auction site has traffic within an order of magnitude of eBay. Most sellers' only other rational option is a local fixed-price sale through, e.g. craigslist - not an acceptible option to many sellers. Thus, how the sellers feel about sniping is immaterial to eBay - they're the only game in town and the sellers will come anyway.
OTOH, buyers care less about where they buy things than sellers do about how they sell them. Change the rules on eBay at this point and they will alienate their base of idiots^Wbuyers - the traffic that keeps eBay the only game in town. They already have a major fraud problem that's driving sales of some especially fraud-prone categories like computers and electronics to sites focusing on local cash deals like craigslist. The last thing they want is to change anything else that might alienate buyers.
(Yes, some buyers hate sniping, but most buyers hate bidding wars even more. Anything that helps sellers raise their average sale price hurts buyers, and since the buyers are what bring in the sellers...)
-Isaac
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Insightful)
where the auction would extend 10 minutes after the last bid. Most of the profit on items came during this "extended"
period of time, and the bidding could get quite furious.
From a technology view-point, this made the closing auction logic complicated (which then affects category pages and
search results).
From eBay's perspective they've already captured the listing fee, and the 10-20% movement in price achieved by
extending the auction nets them (eBay) only a few more pennies on their percentage of selling price, so why
would they bother? It's the same tension as real-estate agents - they'd rather get a $100,000 sale 10 days into
a home's listing than a $120,000 sale 60 days in e.g. a $5000 (assuming 5% commission) at 10 days than $6000
at 60 days. Can you blame them?
-Slak
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't eBay's automatic bidding prevent that? If you were willing to bid $20 and it was currently at $10, th esniper needs to bid $21 to win, which is in theory more than you were willing to pay. Personally I'm suspicious of such tools, but the idea is in the event of a tie the earliest bidder wins, right?
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
As long as you bid your maximum amount whenever you bid then sniping isn't an issue. The thing is human nature is to not bid the max at first, but to just test the waters and bid the minimum or a bit
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
That is why it is always worth bidding an oddball amount slightly higher than your target bid, like $20.53 instead of $20 even.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:4, Interesting)
I admit I'm a sniper. I bid on ebay in either one of two ways.
Either I set my auto-bid at the maximum amount I think that item is worth and let it go (and if I get sniped, oh well).
Or, I set the auction on watch and then bid the max I want to pay for it within the last 20 seconds or so.
This way I never pay more than what I want, and sometimes get a pretty good deal. I see nothing wrong with it at all. I don't need any special software or tools to win, I just stay attentive and watch my items. Anyone else can outsnipe me at the same time. It's happened several times. I don't get bent out of shape over it. I just look for another one.
Which would be fine... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you need evidence of this, just take a look at some bidding histories on eBay and see bids being increased between two or more peopl
Re:Exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm still trying to figure out why "putting in the max value you mean to pay as soon as possible" is not the optimal strategy. I don't eBay much, but I don't get sniped, because I do this. All sniping does is raise the amount I have to pay (but still at or below my max) at the last minute in a way I completely expect, or causes the amount to go over what I'm willing to pay, in which case I shrug and move on with life.
This whole sniping thing is one of the larger gigantic wastes of time and fury I can think of. Use the system as designed and it all works.
Re:Exactly (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
Your problem is that you don't realise that there are a lot of nonlogical people out there, who don't bid their maximum price, but put in a bid, then if they see they've been outbid, put in another one and so forth. To minimise the inflationary effect of those fools, bid as late as possible, not as early as possible.
That's why sniping is the smart move. It's not the snipers that are the cause of the "problem", it's those incremental bidders. Snipers are just keeping your price DOWN (despite all appearances to the contrary) to the benefit of all bidders...
Re:Exactly (Score:4, Interesting)
Possibly true. But not everyone bids your way. That's the problem.
"I don't believe they have an inflationary effect. That effect is illusion. The "real price" is not the "current winning bid", it's "the highest someone will pay for it". Sniping has no effect whatsoever on the real number."
Do you believe in the existence of incremental bidders? Have you seen someone bid in ebay and then get outbid then bid again? Have you seen someone put in lots and lots of little bids until his latest one just outstrips the maximum bid.
If you change your statement to: The winning bid on ebay is the highest that someone will pay for it, *if they put their maximum bid in on time*, then I'll agree with you.
Then I'll agree with you. The thing is, that the incremental bidders obviously aren't always placing their maximum bids. Sniping is just a way of making sure that they're less likely to.
"There are enough irrational bidders to push every item 5-10% over what I'd bid for them, because to them winning itself has value and it doesn't to me; I just want the item."
Sniping's job is to cut some of those guys out of the game, because the irrational bidders (the ones who will bid just-a-bit-more-than-the-other-guy) don't have a chance to irrationally bid.
Funnilly enough, I stopped ebaying ages ago too...
Re:Exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, what would have happened if they also tested the "Moron's Ebay Strateg". That strategy is simple - offer 10 times the actual value of the item. See a computer worth 2,000? Put in a Max bid of 20,000.
Guess which strategy 'wins' the auction?
The study is flawed, it asked the stupid question, not the smart one.
If you want to BUY something, go to the store.
If you want to "Pay less money than at a store", then go to Ebay, and DON'T TRY TO WIN THE AUCTION.
If you consistently win the auction, that means you paid too much money for the item.
Instead, keep using the "Put the max value you will pay", and do it in the RIGHT auctions.
How to find the right auctions?
Look for NON-businesses. (They put in a floor and are just wasting your time 90%) Look for mis-spelled products. And look for things that have few bidders. And be ready to LOSE MOST of the biddings to fools that paid too much. And be ready to accept a product that is not exactly what you wanted, but satisfies your needs for much less than what you expected to pay.
Re:Exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
You got caught up in the game of 'obtaining the product'. You do not go to an auction to obtain the product. You go the STORE to obtain the product. Anyone can "obtain the product" at any auction. I can beat your silly Snipig strategy simply by offering 10 times the value of the product as my max bid.
Only a fool would do that you say? Of course. Any strategy that is the 'best strategy to win an auction is by definition something only a fool would do. That is the nature of auctions. When you go to an auction the point is NOT to obtain the product.
Instead the point is to get the product at a CHEAPER price than standard
Any time there are people out there sniping on a product than whoever wins the bid is BY DEFINITION THE LOSER, not the winner.
I used to hate being sniped, but then I fell in love with it - it protected me from over-paying for something.
The real way to 'win' at the auction is instead to find a product that has so little interest that people are not sniping. You also generally have to totally avoid 'business' sales and look for the UN-professional, individuals doing the selling. Key things to do are to look for mis-spellings, and poor pictures.
Re:Exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
Caught up? I snipe, with the maximum amount I'm willing to pay, because I got "caught up"? This is precisely the opposite. You do not know what the hell you are talking about.
At the same time, the idea is to obtain the object at the lowest possible price, something which is at or below the maximum price I am willing to pay. Obtaining the object is the reason I go to ebay. Otherwise I could just read reviews and look at pictures - but I'm trying
Re:Exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
Uh, no. The point is to get a product I want or need at a price I'm willing to pay. That price doesn't have to be cheaper than "standard", it just has to be a price I will pay.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
pay more, but getting sniped at the end of the auction you really wanted sure sucks, so in that way the buyer
wins.
If you "really wanted" the item, why wasn't your maximum bid price higher?
When I buy something on eBay, I always bit the most I'm willing to pay for the item. The items I win are usually nowhere close to what my maximum bid could have been, and the items I don't win sold for more than I was willing to spend.
Snipers cost people like me nothing. The only way they can hurt you is if you are compulsive spender who suddenly wants something even more just because somebody else was willing to pay $1.50 more than you originally thought it was worth.
Wrong optimization problem (Score:5, Insightful)
For many regular users of ebay, the purpose of ebay auctions is not to maximize economic profit on one single auction. The purpose is to maximize total economic profit across many dozens of auctions conducted over a long period of time. When you are a repeat participant, it can make sense to adopt a strategy which often leaves money on the table, as long as the same strategy has a small probability of winning a lot of money.
The effectiveness of sniping cannot be explained in purely economic terms; one needs a smattering of game theory. In pure economic terms, your strategy of always bidding your maximum leads to minimal risk: either you win the auction and pay less than your maximum, thus profiting the difference, or you lose the auction and do nothing. Obviously, under your strategy, you would always prefer to win the auction, since this is the only scenario that leads to profit. The problem with this strategy is that you are less likely to win the auction if you place your bid first, because
For a repeat participant, it is rational and profitable to take the risk of losing (say) 10 auctions each at a price within $10 under the true worth of the item, in order to have a 1 in 10 chance of winning one of those auctions at a price $100 less than true value. Unless eBay changes their auction rules, sniping is and will remain the best way to maximize expected earnings across a large number of auctions.
If all of this doesn't convince you, then maybe the information asymmetry argument alluded to above will convince you. Since placing a bid reveals information to the other participants, you are always better off placing your bid as late as possible in order to minimize the information available to competing bidders. Doing so certainly never hurts you (if we ignore for the moment eBay's tiebreaker rules, whose effects are negligible, since the costs imposed by bidding second are less than the transaction costs of the sale), and it can sometimes help you if the other participants are irrational, which they are.
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And this is indeed a serious problem with EBay. (Score:5, Insightful)
From my perspective, I don't like that model because I know how much it will inflate the price of items on eBay. The reason I snipe is because I learned years ago that people get attached to the particular item they're bidding on, and if given the chance will end up ratcheting the price well beyond what it's actually worth because they got caught up in trying to win.
If eBay implemented a system like you describe, I think that while they would make more money from each auction, total use of the system would decline because most people aren't interested in paying high prices.
Not only that (Score:5, Insightful)
So... (Score:5, Funny)
In other news . . . (Score:5, Funny)
. . . East Ukrainian dentists declare in their recent study that "Manned spaceflight is more difficult than they thought."
(Seriously . . . shouldn't physists be studying . . . I dunno . . . physics?)
Sure, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, but does that get you the best price? The whole point of eBay's bidding system is that you supply your maximum bid, and they bid for you up to that amount. Thus, you spend less time spamming F5, and you get the best possible price (assuming your max is high enough). Sniping is best used for snatching rare items for which money is no object and using it on any old item is both a waste of time and possibly money.
Exactly: money is no object (Score:5, Insightful)
By sniping, they lower the final price by hiding the information of what they're willing to bid. The auto-bidding feature is supposed to do that for you, but information still leaks out: it tells you the value of the second-higest bid, which is probably close to that of the highest bid. It's a good proxy of the actual price, and you're raising that.
Personally, I don't get too bugged about the snipers. I know what it's worth to me and let the auto-bidders handle it. If I get sniped, it means they were willing to pay more than I was. The seller gets screwed a bit, because the sniper was hiding their willingness to pay more (and therefore probably more than they ended up paying.) But the only thing being done to me as a bidder is that I got my hopes up.
So I don't get my hopes up, and I don't bid on eBay for anything I really, really want. I use eBay not for its auction, but for its flea-market: the ability to get stuff I can't get elsewhere. I usually just pay the "buy it now" price.
Re:Sure, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Often it does, it depends on the other bidders and human nature.
Ahh, but the thing is
Re:Sure, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Physicists? (Score:3, Insightful)
First off, we needed a study to tell us this? Second, these were physicists? Pardon me if I'm not seeing the physics in online auctions.
If this story were on Fark.com, I think it would merit the 'still no cure for cancer' tagline.
Did they miss the obvious? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you only bid once on an item, it could be the only bid. I wonder if they controlled for that.
People are strange and irrational (Score:5, Interesting)
Not the first good idea to be defeated by irrationalism, and not the last.
Re:People are strange and irrational (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't as irrational as you might suppose.
I might bid a maximum of $75 on an old computer that's hard to find, but once I find out that 4 other people are willing to bid higher than that, the perceived value of the old computer has now risen in my eyes, based on the perceived demand. I therefore might be willing to spend more money on that old computer, knowing that the market is large enough so that I could sell it back if I wanted to.
Another strategy to add to this (Score:5, Interesting)
For example, if you want to bid $20 for something, bid $20.02 instead so if somebody else puts a bid of $20 on it, you still win.
Re:Another strategy to add to this (Score:5, Funny)
Old news (Score:5, Informative)
The paper has an interesting comparison between eBay and Amazon, for two distinct cases: common value and private value.
Re:Old news (Score:3, Funny)
Easy solution? (Score:4, Insightful)
But why doesn't EBay operate like flesh-and-blood auctions? Keep the bidding open for the normal duration of time, but then extend the auction time whenever a new bid is placed? You know, like "going, going, gone!" Fairly easy to add 3 or 5 minutes to the end of an auction -- and those who haven't set incremental bidding can still get in on the close if they want to.
Re:Easy solution? (Score:3, Insightful)
The sniping phenomenon is a solution to the problem that bids are visible to other users. In effect it transforms the auction into a blind auction, except for those people that don't understand it that well.
Another thing to note
One Step Back... (Score:5, Funny)
What's the probability of overpriced shipping?
Steps to profit (Score:5, Funny)
1 Snipe eBay auctions
2 ?????
3 Profit!
Actually, I have a forumla that gives the best chance of winning an auction: bid 10x what the item is worth. Can I have some money to study the obvious^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H research the tricky questions of our age now please?
The fact that this was tagged as duh before it had any comments is very telling.
eBay: (Score:3, Funny)
Exactly why I don't bother with eBay ... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you call that "winning" (Score:4, Insightful)
I LOVE Korea (Score:5, Funny)
First they had a veterinarian who [wikipedia.org] claimed to clone the first human!
Now they have a PHYSICIST who claims to be an expert on EBAY AUCTIONS!
Next up: a lawyer who can communicate with dolphins!
Yay Korea! Insane on both halves of the peninsla!
eSnipe (Score:3, Interesting)
Bid what you want to spend... (Score:5, Informative)
People get caught up in the "game" of bidding on eBay which is how you see digital cameras that retail for $299, and sell on Amazon for $240, sell on eBay for $320 -- that's an example I've seen with my own eyes. People are stupid and so sniping is effective.
Article SHOULD read (Score:5, Funny)
AAAAAAA++++++++++ (Score:5, Funny)
Sniping works because of competitive psychology (Score:3, Insightful)
The reason that sniping is the best strategy is because an auction is a competition. One way to help win a competition is to reduce the number competitors. On eBay that means not indicating your interest in an item until the very last seconds of the auction.
In a confusing environment like eBay, many people look for validation of their decisions. One way to validate their uncertain decision is by bidding on something that someone else is bidding on. It makes some people feel good that there is someone else that made the same choice as they did. If you multiply this out, you end up with auctions having 20+ bidders (the madness of crowds). That's a lot of competition. The chances of winning against that many bidders is poor.
If you want to have less competition, and thus win, do not indicate your interest in an item until you have to.
when to snipe and when not to (Score:3, Insightful)
If the item up for auction is a rare collector's item
and you are a collector and MUST have the item, then
snipe you must.
But if the item is readily available elsewhere and you
are just looking for a bargin, then just place a bid
for the highest price that you are willing to pay and
walk away.
Sniper fees (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sniper fees (Score:3, Insightful)
1. The presence of bids on an item increases its perceived desirability and also its visibility.
2. Once someone has bid on something, they are psychologically committed, and there's a chance they'll get into a bidding war with someone else.
If, as is claimed, sniping is the best strategy, then every successful snipe is preventing at least one higher bid that could otherwise have been entered and would have won. As a seller, that's not in my best interests.
The problem with sniping... (Score:3, Interesting)
In the big supply-demand chain, if you are bidding on high demand / low supply items then you'll get raked across the coals with last-minute sniping. But if you want tickets to tonight's Aerosmith, then that's what you're facing.
I'm into Magic cards (i.e. collectibles), where the bidding is often very different. For the most part e-bay doesn't have oodles of truly unique collectibles, just a few. If I'm looking for specific batch of Magic cards, I just set e-bay to e-mail me every couple of days when new auctions come up. When I find an auction I place my max bid and then I forget it. There's enough throughput on e-bay that I can just bid on the next one.
With a 50% variation on some similar auctions and various ending times (to foil snipers?), I don't have to watch over my bid. If I'm not getting my item for $X then I can raise my future bids or just keep trying. Again, these items are always coming up for auction, so this is ideal for the set it and leave it approach. Every once in a while, you'll even get a dead fish, where you're the only "real" bidder and you hit that 50% cheaper mark. I've bottom-fed a good part of my collection in this fashion.
In this case, the snipers just get their cards earlier (in exchange for paying more). And I stand the best chances of getting my goods for the price I'm willing to pay.
Re:The problem with sniping... (Score:4, Informative)
You're stating that sniping is worse for you than using eBay's proxy bidding (when you place your max bid up front and let eBay dispense the increases as necessary)? I can't think of a single possible scenario (assuming no outages, early endings, etc..) where placing a bid earlier (and thusly, announcing your intentions to all possible competitors) is better than placing a bid as late in the game as possible.
And that's not even considering the fact that the majority of snipers use automated sniping sites (www.esnipe.com and www.auctionsniper.com for example), that allow you to set up your bid ahead of time, JUST LIKE EBAY, except you're not locked into it. You can go back and review it, edit it or cancel it up to 5 minutes before the end of the auction. You can't do that with eBay proxy bidding. Once you've placed your eBay proxy bid, you're locked in (except for retracting your bid which is a no-no).
Better yet, the two aforementioned sniping sites allow you to group a collection of bids together in 'bid groups' so that you can try sniping multiple similar auctions and once one of them wins, the other bids will automatically be cancelled.
Here's [moyen.org] an excellent resource for sniping information which will be of benefit to anyone looking for logical arguments and reasons for sniping and not illogical, flawed reasons not to.
Last Post! (Score:5, Funny)
LAST POST!!!
What do you mean, someone posted after me?
Damn.
nothing needs to happen (Score:4, Insightful)
You go on the auction 5 minutes before end, post your max amount 10 seconds before end and - either get it or not - often you time out till after auction end.
Now - if everyone does it that way and 10+ folks are posting at the last 10 seconds, it becomes a lottery.
The server has a certain processing time and does the bids sequentially - probably doing atomic locks on some auction resources. Well, there is a cutoff time where working off the queue stops - the highest offer wins at that point.
There are delays in bidding of up to 10 seconds at times - maybe they are doing it on purpose - add a random delay of a couple of seconds to every bidder the last 30 seconds before close? Internet does it by default anyway if the net is busy.
If the sellers are unhappy about the price they get - they can enter a minimum bid requirement.
With sniping it's the same auction principle as without - just in a much smaller time frame....
Re:I've always wondered this... (Score:3, Interesting)
Let's see:
A friend of the seller's might bid early to drive the price up.
Someone who sells similar items might bid early to get the price up (and thereby drive buyersto their own product).
Someone who won't have internet access when the auction ends.
Someone who prefers to get a bid in and set their maximum bid (the fire-and-forget method).
Someone who wants to scare away other bidders (not tha
Re:Say WHAT? (Score:4, Funny)
Wow, I actually do feel a little better. Maybe there's something to that after all.
Re:ebay's fault (Score:4, Insightful)
I have read that if eBay were to implement this rule, then eBay would fall under more U.S. states' auction regulations.
Isn't this how eBay already works?
Re:Winning for the sake of winning? (Score:4, Informative)
It's got nothing to do with 'beating the other guy' or 'resorting to sniping' or 'winning is the only goal' or any nonsense like that. It's just the optimal strategy for maximising the chance of winning and minimising the price paid for the item.