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How to Barter Anything
RealSimple.com | http://www.realsimple.com
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In
these lean times, your only limit to what you can trade (computer
help for birthday cakes? artwork for dental work?) is your imagination.
Instructions
Now that cash is no longer king, bartering is back. Craigslist.org
alone has seen a 100 percent increase in activity on its bartering
boards in the past year, and dozens of new websites are cropping
up to help eager swappers find one another. Traders save hundreds,
sometimes thousands, of dollars exchanging things as varied as
photography, gymnastic lessons, and babysitting. Following the
advice of bartering veterans, you can reap similar financial
rewards—and more. “There’s a psychological benefit,” says
James Hartley, a professor of economics at Mount Holyoke College,
in South Hadley, Massachusetts. “Bartering is about communities.
It fosters human contact.”
Tricks of the Trade
Follow these four steps when arranging
a barter to ensure that both sides get a sweet deal.

Step 1: Figure Out What You Want to Get—and
What You Can Give.
The first part is easy. Maybe you’re looking
for a yoga class or interior-decorating help. The challenge is
working out what goods or services you can exchange in return.
Tapping into your professional expertise or considering what you
studied in college is an obvious place to start. But also ask yourself:
- What would you sell if you were having
a garage sale tomorrow? Is any of it worth trading?
- What hobbies
could you teach someone?
- Could you craft something to swap? (A
pair of hand-knit mittens? A photo book or a scrapbook?)
- Which
common chores do you enjoy? (People have performed tasks as random
as pulling weeds.) “Everyone has something to offer,” says
Amy Kirschner, founder of Vermont Sustainable Exchange, a business-to-business
bartering network in her home state. She is also involved in
a local bartering group whose members have run errands, given
rides to the airport, or even walked dogs in exchange for what
they needed.
Step
2: Identify a Trading Partner.
Make a list of friends, colleagues,
or existing business clients who might have what you want and want
what you have. Two years ago, Jennifer Garcia, a baker based in
Dallas, was looking for someone to update her website regularly,
so she offered her friend Sharon Harvey, a website designer, unlimited
cakes and baked goods to do the job. The ongoing arrangement has “worked
wonderfully,” says Harvey, saving both women hundreds of
dollars.
Coming up blank on people you know? Try one of these more
organized ways to find a match.
- Join a local bartering
club.
Groups like Kirschner’s exist in towns and neighborhoods
across the country, bringing people together to swap goods and
services. Some are conducted online, others in person, and many
are spread by word of mouth. So check the notice boards at schools,
cafés, and community centers.
- Join a Time Bank. It works
like this: You register (for free) at your local Time Bank’s
website and list the services you have to offer. For each hour
of work you provide to another member, you earn a “time
dollar,” redeemable
for any service someone else has listed on the site. Find a Time
Bank in your area, or learn how to start your own, at timebanks.org.
- Visit specialized
bartering websites.
New niche sites have sprung up where you can exchange almost
anything: kids’ gear,
legal services, cars, you name it.
Step 3: Pop the Question.
Bartering
in a club or online? Skip to step 4.
But what if you want to offer,
say, your accountant the use of your season tickets to the theater
in exchange for doing your taxes? Just ask, advise the pros. Antonio
Puri, an artist based in Philadelphia, was in his dentist’s
chair, absorbing the news that he needed a root canal and a crown,
when he noticed there were no paintings on the office walls. “So
I said to my dentist, ‘You need art. How about doing a trade?’ ” Puri
says. The dentist visited his studio, found a $1,200 painting he
liked, and accepted it as payment for the two procedures.
Step 4: Hammer Out the Details.
Whether you’re
bartering one-on-one, through a group, or online, set the terms
of the deal up front.
- Assess the dollar
value of your goods or service. Trading something tangible, like
a sofa or a bike? Research the price of similar items on Craigslist.org
or in local newspaper classifieds. If you’re swapping a
service, figure what you would usually charge, factoring in supplies.
Then make an even exchange—for example, a $60 birthday cake for
three $20 manicures; eight hours of piano lessons for eight hours
of math tutoring.
- Don’t forget the tax man. In
some cases, the law requires you to report bartering transactions
on your tax return. “That
doesn’t mean you have to declare swapping babysitting with
a neighbor,” says Anthony Burke, an Internal Revenue Service
spokesman. “But a barter between businesses is considered
taxable income.” If you barter regularly, consult an accountant.
- Set the time frame.
Decide how long you and your bartering partner will need to fulfill
your part of the deal, and set a deadline. If it’s ongoing,
set a review date to make sure you’re
both still happy.
- Put it in writing. Take it from Nina Wurtzel, a New York City photographer who shot
and designed a brochure for a local salon in exchange for services: “I
wound up revising the brochure several times, but I received
only one cut and color.” If
the deal will last longer than one exchange, send an e-mail saying, “This
is what I will do and what you will do in this time period,” says
Amy Belanger, deputy director of Green America, a nonprofit that
supports bartering as part of environmental sustainability. But
if it is worth a lot of money or is ongoing, she suggests a signed
agreement. The hallmark of a successful barter? If both parties
are willing to do it again. “Once you start,” says
Belanger, “it becomes part of your lifestyle.”
Author:
by Hannah Wallace
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