Barter Exchanges Catch On as Credit Tightens - 11/11/2008

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2008 News and Press Releases

News News 2008


HEADLINE NEWS:

Barter Exchanges Catch On as Credit Tightens, Small Businesses Find That Trading For Goods And Services Not Only Conserves Cash; It Can Also Substitute For Borrowing And Rack Up Savings
Stacy Perman

BusinessWeek. November 11, 2008

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EXCERPT: Shawn Cressman, president of Cressman's Lawn & Tree Care, the business his father started 33 years ago in Bethlehem, Pa., has occasionally engaged in bartering with other outfits over the years. But transactions were usually informal and not necessarily directly tied to the company's bottom line. These days, though, Cressman sees bartering as a significant way to reduce cash outflow. Last fall he joined the Stroudsburg (Pa.) Merchants Barter Exchange, an association that coordinates and organizes trading of products and services among its more than 10,000 business members. In September, when the transmission blew on one of the firm's trucks, Cressman turned to the exchange and bartered for a replacement. "That would have cost between $1,500 and $2,000, and that was not in my budget," he says. He also bartered to acquire a $4,000 piece of stone-crushing equipment. "I probably wouldn't have bought one this year," he says. "It would have had too much of an impact on my cash flow." But as a result of strategic bartering, Cressman estimates he has been able to save about $6,000 total so far this year. In recent years, bartering has gained currency as a relatively easy path for small outfits to attain goods and services without having to dig into their coffers. It has also become a successful channel to attract new customers and expand one's business. According to the most recent numbers compiled by the National Association of Trade Exchanges (NATE) in Mentor, Ohio, some 400 barter exchanges in the U.S. and Canada generate transactions worth $4 billion a year. […] Barter exchanges are fee-based membership groups. Typically, barter dollars are issued when a member performs a service or offers a product that can then be used to purchase goods or services of another member within the exchange.

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