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Peter's Live Auction Blogs

Peter Gehres is a first generation auctioneer and Realtor based in Columbus, Ohio with Belhorn Auction Services, LLC. He is an instructor at The Ohio Auction School and has earned his CAI and CES designations from the NAA Education Institute and is a recipient of the Pat Massart Leadership Award. He is a member of the National, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan State Auctioneers Associations. He speaks across the country on auction and business related topics through Auctions on Track an auction education, leadership and motivation company.



2010 IAC Prediction Show – Part 2 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Peter Gehres   
Sunday, 11 July 2010 19:38
The 2010 International Auctioneers Championship (IAC) is just a few days away and this post will wrap up our predictions for those individuals who we suspect will make the finals of this year’s contest. As we stated in Part 1 predicting the ultimate winner is next to impossible and a fool's errand, but in our estimation Part 1 & Part 2 should be reasonably accurate. 

Eli Detweiler, Jr of North Carolina is destined for the finals at this year’s IAC and it would not surprise us if he happened to win. Detweiler has a consistent bid call and has done very well in past competitions. Further Eli will be in his comfort zone with this year’s contest in North Carolina and the crowd will likely be pulling for the local star to land the big fish. 

Casey R. Enlow from Oklahoma will likely be on stage with the 14 other finalists when the winner is announced. Enlow has represented his state well in previous IACs and has had strong showings at the World Automobile Auctioneers Championships.

Trev Moravec will still be on the leader board at the end of this year’s IAC. Moravec has both a personal and family tradition of competition and after the emotion of last year’s contest his drive and focus will certainly land him in the finals and even in victory lane. 

Cody S. Lowderman from the Land of Lincoln will make the finals again this year. Cody showed up his older brother Monte last year at the IAC and with Monte occupied with his duties as NAA director at this year’s convention Cody will surly continue the Lowderman tradition of outstanding auctioneering. 

Kevin L. Teets from West Virginia will make the finals this year. Kevin made the 2009 IAC finals and does not show any sign of stopping until he wins it all. 

Mark Younger will again make the finals as he has done before. Mark won the 2009 International Ringman’s Contest (IRC) and might be only man to hold both IAC and IRC for the foreseeable future with the IRC on ice.  As with Detweiler and Moravec we would not be at all surprised if this is the year Younger makes it into the victory circle. 

Others who made the finals last year and would have a good shot this year, include: Paul Adams, Cory Craig, and Zachary Shelley. Of last year’s finalist three are not competing this year and of course 
Kevin Borger won and will be one of the master of ceremonies. 

Lists like this are always dangerous and if not being included offers anyone extra motivation feel free to use it and prove us wrong! We look forward to the contest and watching everyone here on theAuctioneerchannel.com in the coming year. Good luck!
Last Updated on Monday, 12 July 2010 12:52
 
2010 IAC Prediction Show – Part 1 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Peter Gehres   
Saturday, 26 June 2010 16:13
Bid calling contests are impossible to predict before the event and even harder to figure after they are over. This year’s International Auctioneers Championship (IAC) looks to be a good contest with familiar faces and some new blood. While this column will not attempt to predict the winner we would like to suggest a few likely finalists for this year’s contest. 

First up is Robert “Bobby” A. McAdams. McAdams has been on an absolute terror the last 18 months. He has won the Indiana and Kentucky Bid Calling Contests and was a finalist of the Michigan Contest. He won the World Automobile Auctioneers Championship (WAAC) Ringmans Contest this spring and was in the finals to win the entire event. At this pace the sun will not set on this decade without McAdams winning a national title….or two. Look for him to be in the finals at this year’s IAC. 

A fellow Hoosier, Richird “TJ” A. Freiji , will likely join McAdams on the leader board at the end of the first round of the IAC. Freiji puts in a consistent performance at contests and that is sure to land him in the finals. 

The Buckeye State will certainly be proud when past Ohio Champions Joseph M. Mast and Andrew “Andy” White are again in this year’s IAC finals. Both Mast and White made the finals of last year’s IAC as well as this year’s WAAC and Andy was named the 2010 WAAC Raising Star. Like McAdams, Mast is destined to hold one or two titles this decade.  

Paul J. McCartan will be in the finals by our estimation. McCartan delivers a consistent and reliable performance and chant that are a pleasure to both see and hear.  Minnesota’s 2010 Champion and raising star, Matt Schultz, is also competing in this year’s IAC and we wish him the best. Minnesotans have had their fair share of success at the IAC with both Cary Aasness and Kaija Kokesh winning in previous years so do not be surprised when the Land of 10,000 Lakes produces quality auctioneers and champions. 

Our next post will look at the rest of our predictions for the IAC finals. We are not going to pick the full field of 15 but point out some auctioneers you don’t want to miss. Feel free to post videos to help us make our final recommendations. 
Last Updated on Sunday, 27 June 2010 00:46
 
It’s Convention Time PDF Print E-mail
Written by Peter Gehres   
Friday, 22 January 2010 04:18

January brings many state auctioneers conventions. The first weeks of the year are often a slow time for auctioneers and the cold weather makes having auctions in the elements less desirable. If auctioneers can’t sell the next best thing is talking about (and often exaggerating) the auction business to each other at state auctioneers conventions. This year was marathon of sorts for me in terms of conventions. I was invited to speak at and attend the Minnesota State Auctioneers Conventions in Duluth, Minnesota. There are only two things I want to do in Duluth and second on the list is talking about auctioneering. I had an amazing time and my hosts (lead by Col. Kurt Johnson) treated me like auction royalty. Matt Schultz won the Minnesota Bid Calling Championship and you can see his video on the Channel. More videos from the contest will be added later this week and next.

I jumped on a plane back to Columbus and as soon as I landed I drove directly to the Ohio Auctioneers Association annual winter convention just north of Columbus. I managed to catch the tail end of another great convention. They didn’t treat me like auction royalty however…they know me to well. Next week it is off to Kalamazoo, Michigan for the Michigan State Auctioneers Association convention.

All this conventioning and kibitzing plays an important role in the auction business. The Auction Industry is unique in that it is often an individualistic endeavor with individual rewards but no auctioneer can do it alone. Additional auctioneers almost universally share and techniques and trends and are an open book on the keys to success.  Conventions give auctioneers the safe harbor to compare notes, compete in contests and decompress about an industry that even in the best of times is high pressure and draining.  It is said in the world that there are only six degrees of separation. In the auction business it is often less than three and so auctioneers conventions always have old friends, college and past partners. The Auctioneer Channel is an attempt, as much as it is possible to capture that convention culture and share it amongst ourselves and with the world. 

Peter D. Gehres, CAI, CES is a first generation auctioneer and Realtor based in Columbus, Ohio. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter or Linkedin.

Last Updated on Friday, 22 January 2010 13:27
 
Thankful PDF Print E-mail
Written by Peter Gehres   
Thursday, 26 November 2009 23:01

The auction profession is sufficiently challenging that it is rare to find someone who does not love their job. They exist but find themselves soon unburdened by business. The rigors of client negotiations, auction set-up and the stress and turmoil of auction day tend to separate the wheat from the chaff in our profession and despite the hardships this Thanksgiving Day again finds thousands of auctioneers across the nation thankful for their industry.  It is often repeated and widely held that the Auction Industry is recession proof. While this is a great quote to throw out in auction school the facts are that while the industry fairs better then say the yacht building business we are people too and economic disorder affects us all. That said auctioneers are by in large thankful this day for the robustness of their business and the opportunities found in both good times and bad.  

As for me I am thankful for those who walked with me as I found my way in the practice of Auctioneering. While Auctioneering may seem like a natural fit I was the last to catch on. In the summer of 2002, after my father passed away, my mother and I were attending auctions locally in Van Wert County and after a day spent at a particularly fun and engaging farm auction my mother commented that I might be a good auctioneer. At the time I was a mediocre engineering student at The Ohio State University so the thought of being a good anything was intriguing.

At the charity/fun auction that was the culmination of the September 2003 Class of The Ohio Auction School, one of our instructors took me aside and spoke quietly but with conviction, “You were born to do this, you were born to be an auctioneer.” As profound as those statements are today, I will confess they had little immediate effect. But like a seed planted in the cold of winter it was an idea whose time would come. For despite the success and enjoyment of auction school the rigors and demands of engineering school seemed the safer and wiser bet and it was back to that dark mine that I returned.

It took meeting my wife for me to recognize my life’s work and for it to become clear. It was not a sudden realization that auctioneering was the more than just a Sirens song but it was realization none the less. So today I am thankful for the paths I have taken and the paths I should have taken sooner and for those who walked with me even when I was going the wrong way.

Last Updated on Friday, 27 November 2009 15:09
 
Auctioneers: Market Educators PDF Print E-mail
Written by Peter Gehres   
Wednesday, 18 November 2009 01:11

Over the weekend we (Belhorn Auction Services) conducted our final live pottery auction of the calendar year 2009. Looking back over 2009 the one consistent throughout the year has been both buyer and sellers concern about the economy and its effect on the pottery market specifically and the antiques market generally.  Despite the economy we saw good to great results on nearly all of the lots in the auction. While I would like to attribute it entirely to our expert marketing the fact remains that the pottery market, for a majority of lines and styles, is stable if not as robust as it was in the golden days earlier in this decade. The recession that we currently find ourselves in only highlights and accelerates the preexisting trends in these markets.  As auctioneers we are on the front lines of the market. Regardless of what we sell, a well conducted and marketed auction will realize market prices and from auction to auction will reveal general and sometimes detailed trends.

It is easy to get too high on strong prices and too low when items don’t meet expectations. I am as much a victim as anyone. However what is critical for auctioneers to understand is that we are unable to manufacture demand and despite our powers of persuasion we are powerless to create a market where one does not exists or brow beat people into spending. Rather the auctioneer is most effective when he or she is an educator. First educating and managing the expectations of the seller about the reality of the market and what are reasonable expectations. Second auctioneers must educate the buyers on the unique and desirable qualities of a given lot and facilitating their purchase with information and service. Third and often critical to new business is educating the public through prices realized. Our newest contributor to the Auctioneer Channel,
Machinery Pete, is a master at highlighting the true nature of the market based on open and honest prices.

As much as we like to deny it tastes, styles and times change. The collapse in the Victorian furniture market is a perfect example.  The desires and demand of an entire nation and collecting public changed and while we all may wish that this table or that piece would bring what it did 20 years ago the demand simply is not there. Technology and manufacturing also render entire categories of personal property and machinery obsolete and near worthless. Like the winds at sea we are both victims and beneficiaries. As auctioneers our most endearing and useful skill might be helping sellers navigate good times and bad.  

Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 November 2009 14:50
 
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