MY BIZ: ‘No blueprint’ for auction business


Sharpless Auctions moved its sales online during pandemic — and stayed

Sharpless Auctions, at 5049 Herbert Hoover Highway  NE east of Iowa City, moved its auctions online during the pandemic and is continuing with that business model. The Sharpless family has run the auction house since 1988. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Sharpless Auctions, at 5049 Herbert Hoover Highway NE east of Iowa City, moved its auctions online during the pandemic and is continuing with that business model. The Sharpless family has run the auction house since 1988. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Lindsay Dallege of Tipton, Iowa, checks out one of her purchases at Sharpless Auctions, 5049 Herbert Hoover Hwy NE, in Iowa City, Iowa, on Saturday, May 13, 2023. The long-running, family auction house moved to online auctions during the Covid-19 pandemic and is continuing the decision. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Lindsay Dallege of Tipton checks one of her purchases at Sharpless Auctions on May 13 in Iowa City. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

IOWA CITY — Some business owners found that the shifts they had to do during the pandemic ended up transforming their businesses.

Mark Sharpless, owner of Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City, is one of those.

Mark Sharpless, owner of Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City. (Submitted photo)

Mark Sharpless, owner of Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City. (Submitted photo)

Before the pandemic, the auction house — overlooking Interstate 80 just east of Iowa City — held in-person auctions of pre-owned and estate goods every Wednesday evening since opening in 1988.

These days, however, all the Sharpless auctions are held online.

“When the pandemic started, we couldn’t have those live auctions because we couldn’t gather people together,” Sharpless said. “So we went online. I’d say it’s a pandemic success story really.

“At first we were pushed into this, and we weren’t sure how the transition was going to go.

“We do have people ask us ‘when are you going to go back to your live auctions again?’ ” he said. “But the way things are progressing, I don’t think that is going to happen.”

How auctions work

All bids and payments at Sharpless Auctions are now handled virtually.

Two online Friday auctions are held with pick-ups scheduled Saturday. Two Sunday auctions have pick-ups on Monday.

The auction items come in on consignment or are goods purchased by Sharpless, making the auctions a mix of new and used items.

The online platform the company uses, Sharpless said, has made it go quite smoothly.

“People get online and look and see they can maybe get a deal and then they get hooked,” he said.

“Previously, you had to come here on a Wednesday evening and stand and wait for two hours to bid on something,” he said. “Some people just wouldn’t come.

“So now you can bid from anywhere on your phone and you come and pick it up that allows some flexibility in your day. It has freed up customers and our own time. This is a whole different way to run the auction business.”

While the auctions themselves take place online, Sharpless is open during the week if bidders want to stop and look at the items being offered in the auctions that week.

Specialty auctions

Sharpless said he also does specialty auctions, including some estates, RVs, vehicles and lawn and garden equipment.

“We sold five campers (one recent) Friday,” he said. “They were all bought for fair market value, and the winning bidders all picked them up in the time they were allotted, and we’ve got happy customers.

“At this time of year, we’re doing truckloads of nursery stock, including trees and shrubs.”

Then and now

Sharpless, 57, said he does miss some of the interactions he had with customers during the live auctions.

“But I enjoy the freedom of this more,” he said. “There’s a give and take with anything, but this is just a lot smoother way of running auctions.”

It’s easier for customers, too.

“People can bid from anywhere, and this isn’t restricting their time either,” Sharpless said.

In any given week, about 70 percent of the bidders are returning customers.

“Our footprint has grown a lot bigger with online versus in-person auctions,” he said.

The age demographic has shifted, too.

Most of those who came to the live auctions tended to be the over-50 crowd. With online bidding, the business is seeing more young bidders, which is a welcome shift as well, Sharpless said.

The auction business, he added, stays pretty consistent throughout the year, with things picking up slightly in the spring.

A team of 20 to 25 people are required to turn over the auction inventory every week.

“It’s a very unique business. There’s no blueprint to it,” Sharpless said. “We are learning as we go and sometimes we don’t know what we might be auctioning next.

“And sometimes,” he added with a laugh, “I do wonder myself where it all goes.”

Know a business that should be considered for a “My Biz” feature? Let us know by emailing mary.sharp@thegazette.com.

Sharpless Auctions

Owner: Mark Sharpless

Address: 5049 Herbert Hoover Highway NE, Iowa City

Phone: (319) 351-8888

Website: https://sharplessauctions.com/

Dawson Swails checks a winning bidder's purchases as the buyer picks up his tree May 13 at Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City. Two online auctions are held on Fridays, with pickups on Saturdays, with two more auctions on Sundays, with pickup on Mondays, at the auction house, 5049 Herbert Hoover Highway NE, Iowa City. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Dawson Swails checks a winning bidder’s purchases as the buyer picks up his tree May 13 at Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City. Two online auctions are held on Fridays, with pickups on Saturdays, with two more auctions on Sundays, with pickup on Mondays, at the auction house, 5049 Herbert Hoover Highway NE, Iowa City. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Dani Isaac (right) helps her grandmother Cindy Hall, both of Tipton, pick up her purchases May 13 at Sharpless Auctions east of Iowa City. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazet

Dani Isaac (right) helps her grandmother Cindy Hall, both of Tipton, pick up her purchases May 13 at Sharpless Auctions east of Iowa City. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Vintage vinyl records are in one of the lots being auctioned at Sharpless Auctions, east of Iowa CIty. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Vintage vinyl records are in one of the lots being auctioned at Sharpless Auctions, east of Iowa CIty. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

A belt buckle and other items are  in a lot awaiting auction at Sharpless Auctions east of Iowa CIty. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

A belt buckle and other items are in a lot awaiting auction at Sharpless Auctions east of Iowa CIty. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Collectible bottles and figurines are among the items awaiting auction at Sharpless Auctions east of Iowa City.  (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Collectible bottles and figurines are among the items awaiting auction at Sharpless Auctions east of Iowa City. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Dennis Dallege of Tipton wheels out the trees he and his wife, Lindsay, bought at Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City. The auction house, founded in 1988, now does all its auctions online.  (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Dennis Dallege of Tipton wheels out the trees he and his wife, Lindsay, bought at Sharpless Auctions in Iowa City. The auction house, founded in 1988, now does all its auctions online. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)





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