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Articles and Information - Business
By: Bob
Meyer
Companies of every size and description, from the entrepreneurial
startups to multi-national giants, are now acquiring needed goods
and services through barter, corporate barter and countertrade. Here’s
how companies of any size can start to save money by looking for bartering
opportunities with their suppliers… Barter Rule #1:
Virtually anything your company pays cash for is a prime candidate
for utilizing barter. Start by evaluating every product or service
your company buys from the point of view of a barter opportunity.
Could you consider exchanging your company’s product or service
as payment, or partial payment, to a supplier/vendor? This is direct
barter, and involves an agreement between a buyer and seller that
all or part of a bill will be paid through trade-in-kind rather
than cash.
If you cannot come up with a good fit for direct barter, then explore
indirect barter. It’s done through an entity called a trade
exchange or barter company, where different businesses (usually
locally) who are members of the barter company, will buy and sell
to one another using a trade dollar. One way to determine what goods
and services are available is to look a trade exchange’s directory.
Barter Rule #2:
Be sure you fully understand the economics of your own business,
and that of suppliers who are potential barter candidates. Unless
you do, you could wind up negotiating barter deals that waste company
assets. Or, you might turn down a barter endeavor that could be
valuable in the mistaken belief that the terms are unfair.
Understanding a supplier’s cost breakdown can also help in
negotiating a direct partial barter deal. For example, a print shop
buys paper and ink for cash, but rarely operates at 100% capacity.
This down-time makes no contribution to the printer’s fixed
costs. Therefore, a new customer could negotiate to cover the fixed
cost of paper and ink with a cash payment, while the rest of the
job would be payable in barter.
Barter Rule #3:
Negotiate only with the company owner or sales manager. A supplier’s
salesperson is not the person to talk to when desiring a barter
arrangement, for two reasons. First, they are not able to make the
decision, and second, it would be counterproductive cutting into
his/her commission. However, the firm’s owner or sales manager
can understand the value of conserving cash and establishing a long-term
relationship based on using barter in the mix.
Then if it makes economic sense, offer a supplier preferred status
for agreeing to take partial payment in trade. The strategy for
success is to undertake a small transaction first, thus allowing
participants to become familiar with how barter can work for them.
And then build on that success.
Barter Rule #4:
Keep exact records of barter arrangements on your company books.
Make sure at least one person in the accounting department understands
exactly how these agreements are to be accounted for, and give that
person responsibility—and the necessary tool—for booking
them properly.
When you follow these 4 rules you will find that barter can boost
your profits and cut costs.
Barter expert Bob Meyer is the author of the easy-to-understand
24-page valuable report, The World’s Best-Kept Secret. To
learn how you can benefit from this free in-depth report go to www.barternews.com/faststartnew.htm.
Article Source: www.ArticlesBase.com
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