Dodgson would at least value the dinosaurs enough not to sell them relatively cheap at an auction. Seriously, I know dinosaurs don't come with a Kelly Blue Book value attached (Not even Blue), but the dude was way underselling them. He was giving them away at relative yard sale prices. I know he was desperate to get funding for their research and production which was going to be the real money maker, but damn dude, play a little hard to get.
The "you idiots, get more money for the dinosaurs" complaint is pretty popular, and I get where people are coming from, but I got the impression that Eli Whatshisface's company was seriously hurting for money and would take whatever they could get. (I mean, it's possible that Trevorrow legit thinks that $20 million for an adult dinosaur is mad money, I don't get the impression that he's the sharpest knife around, but that's not how the movie paints it.)
JW2 makes repeated mention that
Buffalo Bill Captain Stottlemeyer Weaverly never gets his bonus for delivering the dinos, i.e. InGen never paid him for
doing his job. At first I dismissed the point as the boilerplate oh-no-bad-guy-is-bad-because-he-values-money schtick, but it gets restated several times long after it stops serving to establish character. It's one of the last things Weaverly mentions before he dies.
Then we have Eli being willing to sell the indoraptor for, like, 26 million (it eventually sells for over 40 , but at the time he makes the descision to sell the bid is at 26), despite it being the only one they have. If you think about it, whatever this InGen subsidiary thing is that Eli is running is effectively a tech startup that decided that $26 million is more valuable to them than the only extant protype of the only product thier company exists to sell. This is not a company that is flush with cash. In fact, I'd be willing to bet that they're drowning in debt and that auctioning off the dinosaurs that they technically already own, after tricking some private mercs and some bleeding hearts into shipping them to the mainland for free, was the best of limited options to raise a quick buck.
(This also addresses the point people like to bring up about why Eli would go to the trouble of shipping the dinosaurs off the island instead of just cloning more; they didn't have the time or the cash on hand to feed, house, and care for a crop of new clones while waiting ten years or whatever for them to grow to adult size.)
Granted that these Jurassic World movies are pretty dumb overall, I just think this element is getting more flak than it deserves.
(I do agree that Dodgeson would have made more sense though. Shit, they're already leaning super hard on nostalgia to sell these movies, so why not go for broke.)