How To Start And Operate Your Own Bartering Club
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Based Business Ideas Part 5
Bartering is not negotiating! Bartering
is "trading" for a service, or for the goods you want.
In essence, bartering is simply buying or paying for goods or
services using some thing other than money (coins or government
printed paper dollars).
Thus defined, bartering has been around
much longer than money as we know it today. Recent estimates indicate
that at least 60 percent of companies on the New York Stock Exchange
use the principles of bartering as a standard business practice.
And congressmen barter daily to gain support for their pet projects.
U.S. aircraft manufacturers barter with foreign airlines in order
to close sales on million dollar contracts. Perhaps you have experienced
at one time or another in your life a friend saying, "Okay,
that's one you owe me..." Basically, that's bartering.
The reason bartering enjoys renewed popularity
in times of tight money is simply that it is the "bottom-line"
method of survival with little or no cash. In times of high interest
rates, cash in anyone's pocket is indeed a very precious commodity,
and bartering is even more popular. Bartering affords both the
individual and the established business a way to hold onto cash
while continuing to get needed goods and services.
In addition to saving a business borrowing
costs, bartering can improve its cash flow and liquidity. For
anyone trying to operate a successful business, this is vitally
important, and for individual families in these times, it makes
possible the saving of cash funds for those purchases where cash
is necessary.
To start and successfully operate a bartering
club, YOU MUST THINK IN TERMS OF A BANKER. After all, that's precisely
the reason for your business - to receive and keep track of people's
deposits while lending and bringing together other people wanting
or needing these deposits.
So your first task is to round up depositors.
As a one-man operation, you can start from your home with nothing
more than your telephone and kitchen table, but until you get
helpers you'll either be very small or very busy (probably both).
You can run a small display ad in your local
newspaper. A good ad would include the following ideas:
NEW BARTERING CLUB!
Trade your expertise and/or time for the
merchandise or services you need. We have
the traders ready - merchandise, specialized
skills, buyers too! Call now and register.
ABC BARTERING 123) 456-7890
When respondents to this ad call, you handle
them just as a banker handles some one opening a new account.
You explain how your club works: Everyone pays a membership fee
of $100 to $300, and annual dues of $50 to $100. The depositor
tells you what he wants to deposit, perhaps $150 worth of printing
services, and what he's looking for in return - storage space
for his boat over a three month period. If you have a depositor
with garage space for rent and needing printing services, you
have a transaction.
But let's say you have no "perfect
match" for this depositor. On your list of depositors you
have a dentist who's offering $500 worth of dental work for someone
to paint his house. A woman with a garage to rent in exchange
for dental work for her children. An unemployed painter willing
to paint houses in exchange for a side of beef, and a butcher
who wants to trade a side of beef for advertising circulars.
Remember, when a new member joins your club,
he makes a deposit and states his wants or needs. In the above
example, you have a typical bartering club situation. Your service
is to spend or line up those deposits to match the wants or need
s of the club members.
An affinity for people and a good memory
are vital to this kind of business, especially if you're running
a "one-man show." Generally, when you have a buyer for
one of your depositors, you notify him or her right away with
a phone call.
You simply tell her that Club Member A wants
to rent your garage. She tells you fine, but she doesn't want
any printing services. You simply tell her to hang on because
you are currently in the process of contacting the dentist who
will do the work on her kids' teeth. And so it goes in the operation
of a bartering club.
Some of the larger bartering clubs (with
several thousand members), simply list the deposits and wants
or needs on a computer, and then invite their members to come
in and check out the availabilities for themselves. Others maintain
merchandise stores where the members come in to first look at
the computer listing, and then to shop, using credit against their
deposits. The smaller clubs usually publish a weekly "traders
wanted" sheet and let it go at that.
These methods all work, but we've found
that instead of leaving your members to fend for themselves or
make their own trades, the most profitable system is to hire commission
sales people to solicit (recruit if you will) new members, specifically
with deposits to match the wants and needs of your present members.
These sales people should get 20% of the membership fee from each
new member they sign, plus 3 to 5 percent of the total value of
each trade they arrange and close. This percentage, of course,
to be paid in club credits, spendable on merchandise or services
offered by the club.
You'll need a club charter, a board of directors
or officers, and in many areas, a city or county license. Check
with your city or county clerk for more information on these requirements.
You should also have a membership contract, the original for your
files and a duplicate for the member. In most cases you can write
your own, using any organization membership contract as a guide,
or you can have your attorney draw one up for you. You'll also
need a membership booklet, or at least an addenda sheet to your
contract, explaining the rules and bylaws of your club. It's also
suggested that you supply your members with consecutively numbered
"club membership identification cards" for their wallets
or purses. Some clubs even give membership certificates suit able
for framing. You can pick these up at any large stationery house
or commercial print shop.
Two things are important to the make up
of the membership package you ex change for membership fees:
1. It must be as impressive as you can make
it.
2. It must be legal, while serving your needs almost exclusively.
Basically, you should have at least 100
members before you begin concentrating on arranging trades. As
stated earlier in this report, the easiest way to recruit new
members is to run an ad in your newspapers, and perhaps even on
your local radio stations as well.
Follow up on these inquiries with a direct
mail package, which would typically consist of a brochure explaining
the beauty and benefits of being a member of your bartering club,
a sales letter, and a return reply order form. After you've sent
out the direct mail piece, be sure to follow up by phone, and
if necessary, make a call in person as any other sales person
would do.
Another way of recruiting new members is
via the Amway Introduction Party Program. Allow a certain number
of club credits for each party a club member arranges for you.
Insist on at least 10 couples for each party, and then as the
"Attraction of the Evening," you or one of your salespeople
give a motivation-benefits available recruiting talk. Be sure
you get the names, addresses and phone numbers of everyone attending,
and be sure that everyone leaves with your literature.
If all those in attendance at these parties
do not join, then follow up on them, first by phone and then with
personal sales presentations. Once you've got them interested
in your club, do not let go or give up on them until you have
sign ed them as members. Another thing - take a page from the
Party Plan Merchandiser's Handbook, and look for those who would
be most likely to want to promote a similar party for you. Offer
them an item of merchandise they might be particularly interested
in, and club credits if they'll not only join, but also stage
a party for
you.
A bit more expensive, but just as certain
of success are free seminars. Rent a large meeting room, advertise
in your local papers, and then put on a hard-sell recruiting show.
Such a plan is very similar to the party plan idea, but on a larger
scale. An inside tip: Whenever you stage a recruiting party or
seminar, always "pad the audience" with your own people,
who will of course lead the way for those you're trying to recruit.
As stated earlier, you can start operations
out of your home, but working out of your home has a number of
growth inhibiting factors. After a certain period of time, the
growth of almost any kind of business is retarded when it's operated
out of a home. So just as soon as you possibly can afford to,
move into an office of some sort. Keep your eyes open and consider
the feasibility of sharing an office with an insurance agent or
real estate broker. Check your newspaper classifieds for businesses
willing to share office space or to rent desk space or other office
amenities.
This is the kind of business that demands
an image of success. You just can't keep people from "dropping
in" when you're operating strictly on a local basis. And
when you attempt to hire sales people, a place of business to
work out of is just as important to them as how much commission
they're going to receive. Image is super important, so don't neglect
it!
Ideally, you should have one salesman for
every 50,000 people in your area. Run an ad in your local newspaper,
and also list your needs with your state's employment service.
Hire ONLY commission salespeople. Give them a percentage of the
membership fee for each new member they sign, plus a small commission
on each trade deal they close.
Assign each of your people specific territories,
and insist that they call on potential commercial accounts ranging
from the "hole in the wall" rubber stamp shop to magazine
publishers and commuter airlines. There's plenty of business available
in every city or metro area in the country. Encourage your sales
people to be creative and imaginative when calling on prospects.
Then, be sure that you keep an open mind and listen to their wild
trading proposals (some "wild" proposals have been known
to be come "wildly" successful)!
Schedule "open discussion" sales
meetings every morning before your salespeople "hit the bricks."
Have each of them report on their selling efforts from the day
before, and present to you a written list of prospects they plan
to call on today. Set up sales motivation workshops to be held
at least once a month, and at least once a week schedule a motivational
speaker or play one of the widely available success/inspirational
tapes as a closing feature of your morning sales meetings. Stock
sales success books and en courage your people to borrow them,
take them home and read them. Your sales people will make you
rich, but only if you turn them on and keep them flying high with
personal motivation.
Should you or should you not accept installment
payments from new members? Yes, by all means! But only when you've
got their signature on a contract drawn up for your benefit and
deemed legally binding by your attorney. What about bank cards?
Yes indeed! In fact, you'll find that your capability of handling
bank cards will double or even triple your sales.
Precisely how much are you going to need
in actual start-up costs? We would estimate at least $500 for
your printing and legal fees, unless you can trade charter member
ships in your club for these services. Timewise, you're going
to be putting in 18-hour days, and 7-day weeks, until you get
those first 100 people signed up. And there won't be any money
for salary or long-deserved vacations from these first 100 members
you sign. You'll need it all for advertising, membership packets
and office set-up. However, if you can really work at it, you
should be home free in six weeks or less. Then you can set up
your office, hire a couple of girls to handle the paperwork, and
take on a salesperson or two.
Reputation and success in matching offers
to wants will be just as important as image, so give it your all.
Don't give up; stand behind the implied, as well as the real promises
you make to your members.
A couple of final notes: Should you offer
a guarantee of satisfaction? Only so long as it makes money for
you, and you can back it up. There's not a person in business
any where who enjoys refunding a customer's money. But don't forget
that the existence of your business depends on service. The more
you project an image of a "people pleaser," the greater
success you're going to achieve. This is definitely not a business
for someone who doesn't enjoy "waiting on" people. You've
got to like people, enjoy helping them, and want the inner satisfaction
that comes from selling new ideas.
This is definitely a growth business. Bartering
Clubs in metropolitan population areas of 300,000 or more are
reporting incomes of over a million dollars. The average in cities
of 100,000 population is about $150,000 per year.
Actually, no experience or special training
is required. The operation of a Bartering Club is equally suited
to women or men. Both do equally well as salespeople. It's a business
that fills a need, and a kind of membership program people will
stand in line to be a part of, once they've been introduced to
the benefits.
This is the plan. It's going to take your
time and effort to get organized, but after your initial work
to establish this business, you can become quite wealthy in a
relatively short time.
Read over this plan again; determine if this is "the one"
for you, and then go all out. It's up to you, and all it takes
now is action on your part.
One of the best of all the available sources
of ongoing help and knowledge about bartering is a quarterly publication
entitled Bartering News. Write and ask for a sample copy. The
address is:
Bartering News
PO Box 3024
Mission Viejo, CA 92690

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