Use this as a planning checklist with your committee, venue lead, and auction team.
1) A run of show that protects the “giving window”
Guests give best when they’re present, seated, and emotionally connected. Avoid stacking housekeeping notes, awards, and long videos right before the paddle raise. Instead, keep the program moving and make the giving moment feel like a natural next step.
2) A clean story arc (one mission, one ask)
Your “why” should be simple enough that a guest can repeat it at their table. A strong emcee and benefit auctioneer will reinforce the same story throughout the night: who you serve, what changes, and what tonight’s gifts will do.
3) Silent auction items that are easy to say “yes” to
The most reliable packages tend to be experience-forward (dining, travel, local getaways), family-friendly, or hyper-practical. Keep descriptions short, benefits clear, and bidding steps simple—especially if guests are mobile bidding.
4) A paddle raise (Fund-a-Need) with real value levels
The strongest giving moments connect each level to a tangible impact (not vague “support our mission”). Make sure the amounts fit your room. If most of your audience can realistically give $250, your ladder needs to honor that—not start at $5,000 and hope.
5) Event-night software that reduces friction
The goal isn’t “fancy tech.” The goal is fewer bottlenecks: faster check-in, smooth bidding, clear receipts, and checkout that doesn’t eat the last 45 minutes of your night. If you’re adding or switching tools, build in training time for volunteers and a test run before guests arrive.
6) A volunteer plan that’s operational (not just hopeful)
Assign jobs by function: registration, item display, spotters/runners, checkout support, and donor hospitality. When roles are clear, your guest experience feels “effortless” even behind the scenes.
7) A compliance-aware receipt plan (especially for auctions)
Charity auctions are often
quid pro quo transactions (a donor pays and receives something of value). Your team should be prepared to provide acknowledgments and good-faith fair market value estimates where required. The IRS explains quid pro quo disclosure rules and auction deductibility basics in its guidance for charitable organizations. (See IRS resources on quid pro quo contributions and charity auctions.) (
irs.gov)