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February 3, 2002: Mike See, vice president of Trendsetter Men's Wear in Orland Park, said Barter now accounts for 35 percent of sales for his home-based men's clothing business. See joined Art of Barter, a Skokie-based barter brokerage, in 1994. See has used his barter credit to pay for accounting services, floral services and even dinners at area restaurants. "Today's businesses are looking for new business, and barter gives them an extra dimension," See said. ….about 80 percent (of members) are service-oriented, vice president John Hora said. "…. It's cheaper to buy things with widgets than with cash," Hora said. Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Art of Barter has experienced a surge in business. "When things (sales) get tight, people are very resourceful and they find ways to keep things going," Hora said. Ken Courtright, owner of Mr. C's restaurant in Oak Lawn, allows customers using barter credit to dine there from Sunday through Thursday. The restaurant, 9848 Southwest Highway, reserves its high-volume days for cash customers. Courtright has belonged to Art of Barter since 1997 and estimates that he does about $20,000 worth of bartering each year. "I thought it (barter) might be a good way to stimulate business during the slow periods," he said. Courtright has used his barter credit for dental services and to have his parking lot sealcoated. |
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Barter trades help a business generate cash sales
By Jim Kendall Mark Golden rewarded an employee with a trip to Mexico for two. Nice reward — at no direct cost to Golden because he used barter dollars. “We love barter,” said Golden, an ophthalmologist and head of Doctors for Visual Freedom, a Lasik eye clinic at Woodfield Shopping Center in Schaumburg. “Barter patients are excellent patients because they refer their cash-paying friends.” Golden has it right. Barter’s not for everybody. For one thing, not everything is tradable. “We use barter dollars to trade services, but not products,” explains John Hora, vice president at Art of Barter Inc. in Lombard. “One of our members may put in new drain tile for your sump pump; you’ll pay in barter dollars for the service but in U.S. dollars for the tile.” “If you take the time to understand it, barter can be a really good thing,” said Robert Itzkow, a Chicago attorney who doesn’t barter legal services but represents companies that are into barter. “It’s a form of advertising. I may come to your restaurant with trade dollars today but come back next time with cash.” Using barter to add incremental income to your business may make sense. Like any other tool, however, barter must be managed. Claude Jewell, a 20-plus year barter veteran who said the concept “brought customers I wouldn’t get” to his Glen Ellyn diving store and who today runs Claude Jewell Scuba in Oak Park, suggests that newcomers restrict barter to 5 percent to 10 percent of their business. “You can get too many (barter) credits and discover you can’t pay the gas bill,” he warned. Although you can engineer your own trades — landscaping for house painting is one example — Your barter dollars will run through a barter account akin to a checking account in that barter credits go in and out depending on whether you are buying or selling services. You and the IRS will get a 1099 at the end of the year. Barter groups actively promote members within their family. Last Monday, for example, www.artofbarter.com listed 17 new members whose services ranged from a Willow Springs document shredder to a Palatine architect. Barter groups charge an initiation, or membership, fee, and levy a cash transaction fee on each trade. © 2005, 121 Marketing Resources Inc. | |
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