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| F.A.Q
- Frequently Asked Questions: |
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What
is Barter?
Barter allows you to buy what you need and pay for it with otherwise
unsold products and services --- without the use of cash. A leading
barter company executive, when asked "How big is the barter business?",
responded by saying "No one really knows how big it is because companies
won't talk about it." "They're not advertising it," he said. "They
don't want their competitors to know about bartering."
"Whatever it is
--surplus or seasonal inventory, a discontinued line, canceled orders,
store returns-- you can trade it, rather than liquidate it, and recover
the value that has been lost," says an executive of one of the oldest
bartering companies in America.
What
are the three primary sectors within the barter industry?
Small Business Exchanges. Store owners and small retailers
trade among themselves for anything from stationery to eye exams in
order to avoid a cash outlay. There are about 400 exchanges nationwide.
Corporate Barter.
Companies can get rid of excess inventory, penetrate new markets and
expand sales while avoiding costly write-offs, maintaining working
capital and net worth, improving earnings and increasing cash flow.
Worldwide, bartering
is known to be very profitable despite the lack of formal records.
Analysts say that Asia alone has a bartering business worth
$90 billion a year.
Countertrade.
This involves a majority of large multinational companies that sell
to countries that have weak currencies or require that partial payment
be in goods. This form of trade has been on the increase for years,
and is estimated to currently represent about 40% of the world
economy.
How
can I barter outside my own city?
Trade exchanges participate in reciprocal trade relationships with
other exchanges across the country -- offering a multitude of additional
barter opportunities. The ability to use trade dollars, acquired by
selling a product through your west coast exchange, to buy products
from an exchange in the east, is accomplished thru the reciprocal
trade organization. The more than 400 exchanges in the US, have an
average membership of 550.
How will my business profit from barter?
Barter produces new business -- allowing you to expand your
market and maintain your cash-paying customers.
New distribution
channels are possible. If you are liquidating a product (or product
lines) you may want to sell those into international markets to protect
your local markets. However, barter no longer is just an option for
unloading distressed merchandise, it has been used by companies as
a creative tool for expanding sales and penetrating new markets.
Barter conserves
cash. Say you have ten vacant hotel rooms at $100/night and you
need a new copy machine priced at $1,000. Barter provides a way in
which you can buy your copier, fill your empty rooms (at your cost
on the rooms) and maintain your cash. The same is true with filling
empty tables for a restaurant. Plus, barter provides added earnings
potential for your wait staff.
Barter puts
ideal resources to work. Excess capacity is converted into needed
goods and services for your organization.
Barter provides
a competitive edge. Barter clients are new clients that bypass
competing companies to do business at your establishment while you
maintain your existing cash clients.
How does barter work within a trade exchange?
A trade exchange eliminates the limitations of one-on-one trading
where each business must want what the other business has to offer.
Clients of an exchange use trade dollars, instead of cash. to handle
their transactions. If a hotel trades $1,000 worth of rooms to another
client, the hotel receives $1,000 in trade dollars which it can use
to purchase what it needs from other exchange clients.
An exchange acts
as a third party record keeper, providing monthly statements to clients,
which reflect all trade purchases, sales and a current trade dollar
balance.
How
does a "Credit Line" work with bartering?
A credit line, offered by a growing number of barter exchanges, is
basically an extension of barter credits, which allow a business to
buy essential items from other network members before selling
its own goods into the system.
(ie;) A barterer
who owns a roofing company, which means he can perform his work only
during the warm months, uses the credit line during the winter to
fix his trucks and get his advertising campaign ready.
If you apply for
credit, expect barter companies to check your credit rating and vendor
references, although the application process should be easier than
with a bank loan; on credit lines worth more than $10,000,
owners may also have to sign personal guarantees. Although you'll
pay interest on purchases you make with your credit line, you'll be
able to pay back interest and principal with bartered goods rather
than precious cash.
What
companies are involved in barter?
Nationally, over 250,000 businesses are involved in barter.
It is estimated that 65% of the Fortune 500 companies engage
in barter to one degree or another. Include on this list are PepsiCo,
Inc., Pizza Hut, Casio, General Electric, IBM, Amoco, Caterpillar,
3M, Goodyear, Xerox, Pan-Am, Chrysler, and Hilton.
What are the "HOT" barter products?
Office space is a Hot trade. A recent innovation is
bartering goods and services for excess office space. Trading advertising
time, hotel rooms, or office equipment, among other goods and services,
for tenant subleases on unused space across America.
Real estate bartering
activity could push the transaction values into the $100 million range.
Financial institutions have foreclosed properties on their books,
and corporations have closed plants; in both cases, the balance-sheet
impact can be severe. "Real estate can bring an awareness to senior
management that a merchandise deal might not. It's a hard asset that
the corporate controller will be well aware of and trying to figure
out how to use. When the menthol of disposition becomes barter, that
get attention," remarked a leading barter executive.
Some barter firms
are venturing into entirely different areas. "We go further than just
trading space for goods. Right now we're trading construction equipment,
putting up buildings, and renovating offices," says one of the leading
barters in the country.
How
do I select a barter exchange?
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Compare
services and fees of barter exchanges in your community. Check
the listing of member businesses and their locations to be sure
you can get the goods and services you need.
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Find out how much advertising the exchange does for its
members.
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Determine how many members of the exchange's total membership
are currently trading and how many are on standby or on
hold status (meaning they have bought substantially more
than they have spent, or vice versa).
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Get a referral list of the exchange's members, and ask
them whether they are satisfied with the services. Also, make
the usual business reference check with the local Better Business
bureau or chamber of commerce.
Are
there any tax advantages to barter?
Barter income is business over and above your normal cash sales and
is treated the same as cash income. Trading should be considered a
marketing tool, not a tax tool. As with cash income, trade purchases
that are business-related are also tax deductible.
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