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iRostrum

Performance & Outcomes

Performance and outcomes in auction operations are not limited to hammer prices alone. They include bidder participation, sell-through, reserve performance, post-sale workflow, and how effectively results are converted into completed transactions.

What is bidder conversion in an auction?

Bidder conversion refers to how effectively interested users move from browsing into registration, bidding, and meaningful participation.

A healthy auction does not only attract attention. It converts attention into active bidding, which is why sign-up flow, registration clarity, and process confidence matter.

What is reserve performance?

Reserve performance refers to how effectively bidding activity reaches or exceeds the minimum acceptable sale threshold set for lots.

It helps explain whether an auction is generating genuine buying pressure, rather than only views, watches, or low-intent bidding.

What happens after an auction closes?

After an auction closes, results move into confirmation, buyer communication, invoicing, payment handling, and operational follow-up.

This stage is often where professionalism is most visible. Clear post-sale workflow helps buyers understand what happens next and helps operators complete transactions efficiently.

What is auction invoicing?

Auction invoicing is the process of generating and publishing the buyer’s financial summary after a successful sale.

In practical terms, this usually includes the lots won, hammer prices, charges, taxes, and payment instructions. It is a key part of post-auction transparency.

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What is auction settlement?

Auction settlement is the process of moving a completed sale through payment, reconciliation, and administrative completion.

Settlement matters because an auction is not fully complete at the moment the hammer falls. The commercial outcome depends on what happens afterwards.

What are post-auction settlement states?

Post-auction settlement states are the stages a transaction passes through after the sale result is known, such as invoice published, payment pending, paid, adjusted, cancelled, or completed.

These states help operators track progress and manage exceptions consistently, especially where taxes, additional charges, or after-sale changes need to be handled.

What happens if a winning bidder does not complete the sale?

If a winning bidder does not complete the sale, the operator may need to cancel the result, reopen the process, or move to an underbidder or after-sale workflow.

This is why post-auction controls are part of performance, not just administration. Operational recovery affects realised value.