logo logo
Donate
    • Membership
    • Donate
  • Social Justice
    • Racial Justice
    • Climate Justice
    • Disability Justice
    • Economic Justice
    • Food Justice
    • Health Justice
    • Immigration
    • LGBTQ+
  • Civic News
  • Nonprofit Leadership
    • Board Governance
    • Equity-Centered Management
    • Finances
    • Fundraising
    • Human Resources
    • Organizational Culture
    • Philanthropy
    • Power Dynamics
    • Strategic Planning
    • Technology
  • Columns
    • Ask Rhea!
    • Ask a Nonprofit Expert
    • Economy Remix
    • Gathering in Support of Democracy
    • Humans of Nonprofits
    • The Impact Algorithm
    • Living the Question
    • Nonprofit Hiring Trends & Tactics
    • Notes from the Frontlines
    • Parables of Earth
    • Re-imagining Philanthropy
    • State of the Movements
    • We Stood Up
    • The Unexpected Value of Volunteers
  • CONTENT TYPES
  • Leading Edge Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Webinars

Going Once, Going Twice…Christie’s Partners in the Digital Age

Jim Schaffer
August 20, 2018
“Metal Circles Relief,” Housing Works Thrift Shop

August 16, 2018; Barron’s

Successful charity live auctions are a work of theatrical art. Expert auctioneers from the premiere auction houses Sotheby’s and Christie’s abandon their polite, hushed formality to single out bidders by name, suggesting they would be pikers if they do not keep bidding. Witty and tart-tongued, they wheedle, needle, cajole, and shame the guests in the room into spending absurd amounts, while their peers gasp and laugh along and the charity’s development director holds her breath. Like when you engage a graphic artist who typically works on staid Fortune 500 accounts, these auctioneers light up and lighten up when given the freedom to let loose with their rarified skills and deep understanding of human nature.

Sotheby’s and Christie’s have long assisted the nonprofit sector in various ways, such as lending their professional auctioneers for charity auctions, offering services to museums, and assisting executors and beneficiary nonprofits for valuation and disposition of personal property assets and consignment management.

Barron’s says that Christie’s work with nonprofits is expanding. As NPQ reported last May, Christie’s helped raise $835,111,344 million through the sale of Rockefellers’ wide-ranging collection for the beneficiary nonprofits named by Peggy and David Rockefeller. This was the highest auction total ever for a private collection.

More recently, Christie’s is collaborating with the online charity auction site Charitybuzz to help its clients maximize the impact of their philanthropic auctions outside the “saleroom.” The collaboration creates complementary avenues for charitable giving that can be easily coordinated with the traditional auction process. Charitybuzz specializes in offering “priceless” opportunities for exclusive experiences, luxury travel, and access to notable celebrities and influencers.

Givergy, a Charitybuzz partner, adds digital fundraising channels like interactive silent auctions, online “paddle raises,” and pledging capabilities. By integrating these additional fundraising streams with its renowned auction services, Christie’s aims to help its clients harness community support and create a comprehensive fundraising campaign for causes that leverages both traditional and digital approaches.

The institutions Christie’s works with “are keen to find other ways to raise money,” says Ben Whine, Christie’s development director, museum services.

Sign up for our free newsletters

Subscribe to NPQ's newsletters to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

By signing up, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use, and to receive messages from NPQ and our partners.

“We work with a lot of institutions around the country, and they are always asking for ways for us to advise and support them on their charity auctions,” Whine says. “We’ve been able to do that successfully by sending out auctioneers. But museums and other institutions are keen to find other ways to raise money.”

Charitybuzz is a for-profit company that auctions luxuries and celebrity-backed experiences to some 200,000 vetted bidders worldwide. Charitybuzz charges 20 percent to cover its marketing and concierge services.

Galas and the live and silent auctions these extravagant events typically include are expensive and time-consuming to produce, should not be undertaken more than once a year, and are fraught with unknowns like weather, a bigger brand charity in the area deciding to hold its gala the same evening, and other threats. Charitybuzz and Givergy are reinterpreting traditional gala fundraising tactics for the Internet Era. They offer the opportunity to make your auction virtual and expose it to a new set of donors looking for extraordinary experiences.

Some charities, like Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, win big with Charitybuzz, like coffee for a few minutes with Apple CEO Tim Cook at Apple Headquarters in Cupertino, CA raising $610,000. If your organization can source experiences that fit with what the Charitybuzz audience is craving, you can run your auctions throughout the year. This is an especially important opportunity for charities with modest donor constituencies but with access to extraordinary experiences.

A typical charity auction at the Waldorf Hotel in New York may have 500 people attending, but often only a small percentage bid. So Charitybuzz encourages nonprofits to “think about fundraising options outside of just one night out of the year,” he says. “We become a steady source of revenue and it minimizes the risk.”

For Christie’s, a collaboration with Charitybuzz potentially allows the auction house to help its institutional clients raise more money, and “hopefully together and develop a year-round fundraising strategy,” Erwin says.

—Jim Schaffer

Our Voices Are Our Power.

Journalism, nonprofits, and multiracial democracy are under attack. At NPQ, we fight back by sharing stories and essential insights from nonprofit leaders and workers—and we pay every contributor.

Can you help us protect nonprofit voices?

Your support keeps truth alive when it matters most.
Every single dollar makes a difference.

Donate now
logo logo logo logo logo
About the author
Jim Schaffer

The founders of Covenant House, AmeriCares, TechnoServe and the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp were my mentors who entrusted me with much. What I can offer the readers of NPQ is carried out in gratitude to them and to the many causes I’ve had the privilege to serve through the years.

More about: FundraisingNonprofit NewsOnline GivingTechnology
See comments

You might also like
Information as Civic Infrastructure—and How Philanthropy Can Support the Ecosystem
Rhett Ayers Butler
Wellbeing Is Infrastructure
Nineequa Blanding
Investing Your Values In the New Age of AI Civil Rights
Whitney Shepard
Funders Need to Get Dollars Out the Door for 2026 Midterms
Joe Goldman
Data as Destiny in the Steel City
Ana Carolina de Assis Nunes and Cella Sum
The Crisis Facing Organizing Isn’t Just Scale. It’s Also Structure.
Dizzy Zaba

Upcoming Webinars

Group Created with Sketch.
March 19th, 2:00 pm ET

Open Board Search

How Casting a Wide Net Transforms Nonprofit Governance

Register
Group Created with Sketch.
March 26, 2:00 pm ET

Learn Out Loud

How Every Philanthropy, Nonprofit, and Community Member Can Leverage Power in Our Fight Against ICE

Register

    
You might also like
A person holding up a sign that reads, “System Change, Not Climate Change”
Information as Civic Infrastructure—and How Philanthropy...
Rhett Ayers Butler
Wellbeing Is Infrastructure
Nineequa Blanding
A magnifying glass positioned over a stack of dollar bills, symbolizing the need to take a closer look at public funds.
Investing Your Values In the New Age of AI Civil Rights
Whitney Shepard

Like what you see?

Subscribe to the NPQ newsletter to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

See our newsletters

By signing up, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use, and to receive messages from NPQ and our partners.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Copyright
  • Donate
  • Editorial Policy
  • Funders
  • Submissions

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

 

Nonprofit Quarterly | Civic News. Empowering Nonprofits. Advancing Justice.
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.