Category: Barter Exchange
Earn Cash While Selling on Trade

Some businesses can also generate cash sales as a by-product of earning Trade Dollars. Hotels and resorts are a good example of this process.

The mortgage, insurance and utilities on a hotel are fixed, whether the hotel is fully occupied or nearly empty. The incremental cost of filling an unused room is minimal. To pay for the extra house cleaning, laundry, and complimentary items such as soaps and shampoos, it costs about $20 per room night.

But just think about how much cash revenue that twenty dollars can generate. The people staying in that room order room service, buy sodas from the machine, magazines and gifts from the gift shop and eat in the restaurant. It’s even more lucrative if it is a resort. When a destination resort offers sports, tours and entertainment, visitors spend a lot of money on peripherals.

The hotel has generated cash it would not have had while producing full value for the room in Trade Dollars. In addition to the new cash flow, the hotel can use the Trade Dollars to offset cash expenses, spend on capital improvements or enhance their advertising campaigns.

 
Barter Exchange Q&A: Credit Lines & Trade Fees

Q: This question has to do with running an exchange versus what the difference is between the line of credit and a debit to a member acct.

Since an exchange can “create” trade dollars as needed by simply assigning and increasing a line of credit to our exchange, and since those trade dollars have no tax consequences as they are created rather than earned through sale activity, what is the point of charging a member’s account $10 or $15 per month in trade dollars?

We were under the impression that the reason we debit a member account for trade dollars each month is so we have trade dollars available to the exchange for business and personal use, such as advertising for the exchange in a member magazine. But if we simply have the right to create and increase our exchange trade dollar line of credit there appears to be no need to debit the member account other than to create a sense in the member that they need to trade more often since we are debiting their account.

A: One is a credit line where you are using trade dollars that you haven’t earned, which is no different than a business getting a credit line or taking a business loan from a bank to use for business expenses. This credit line (when used) or loan has to eventually be repaid. Charging members a monthly fee in trade becomes trade dollar revenues to the exchange whereby you are earning trade dollars from sales (fees) that you can use to pay for business expenses, such as advertising, office cleaning, computer networking and repair, etc.

Let me correlate this to the US government. The government collects taxes (as an exchange would collect monthly trade fees). They use those taxes to pay for government operating expenses. But, they don’t collect enough taxes because the government spends more than they collect. So, the government is deficit spending, creating a huge deficit in the economy, which a) eventually screws up the economy and b) somehow the deficit needs to get repaid.

Spending a credit line for operational expenses is OK, but only to a certain extent as significant deficit spending will screw up your exchange’s economy. And like any bank loan or credit line, the credit that you extended (even to to yourself) has to be repaid. The only way an exchange has to repay the credit extended to an exchange is to earn trade dollars from monthly trade fees or from profit derived from trade sales.

Most highly successful trade exchanges attempt to maintain a zero or near zero deficit system, meaning the total of all of the positive account balances equal the total of all of the negative account balances, including the exchange’s operating accounts. Exchanges do this by earning as much trade as they need to cover trade dollar expenses.

 
Barter Exchange Q&A: Credit Members for Set-up Fee?

Q: There is an exchange that is signing members up by giving them a trade dollar credit in the exchange equal to the new account set-up fee they choose to start with.

This seems to be a great idea.

The question is… If I post a sale to a member for the purposes of depositing credits into their account (therefore triggering the appropriate 1099 activity for the member),  I am getting those credits from my operating account’s credit line. Are the credits I use from my credit line considered income to my exchange once I sell them to someone else?

 

A: Posting trade dollars from your operating account to a members account would be an expense to your exchange. You are basically spending trade dollars that just haven’t been earned yet. In this particular case, it appears to be a Marketing or Sales Expense, which should offset future trade dollar revenues, but speak to your accountant to be sure. 

While this sounds like a great idea, in my opinion, doing this can have significant long term repercussions:

The exchange is spending trade dollars that it has not earned, thus creating a deficit in the exchange’s economy. Exchanges should ultimately maintain a zero deficit system to remain healthy and prosper.

You will end up with all of your members having a positive trade balance, with no negative offsets, so members will have little incentive to sell and get trade, as they already have trade dollars in their account.

If members accumulate too much trade and initially don’t find things to spend it on quickly, they may go on hold and stop selling.

It eliminates the urgent need for members to make immediate sales so that they can purchase new trade opportunities when they become available.