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Inc. November 1, 2009 Minda Zetlin |
Is a Barter Exchange Right for Your Company? Careful: Some barter trades can be costly. |
Entrepreneur July 2005 Chris Penttila |
Making the Trade Business bartering is back in style and spanning the globe. The challenge for entrepreneurs who want to barter will be figuring out their options. |
Inc. November 1, 2009 Minda Zetlin |
Online Barter Exchanges Here are the largest online barter exchanges. All of them let you peruse available goods before joining |
The Motley Fool August 10, 2007 Elizabeth Brokamp |
Ask Mrs. Riches: The Power of Bartering There are pros and cons to doing business in the ancient style of bartering. The practice has certainly gotten a makeover in recent times, and its new name, reciprocal trade, reflects that. |
CIO July 15, 2001 Lauren Capotosto |
Barter Boom According to The International Reciprocal Trade Association, a Chicago-based group that promotes barter, the barter business is on the rise, with 1.2 million businesses expected to swap goods and services in North America within a decade... |
Reason June 2009 Greg Beato |
Barter Country As the economy suffers, a nation turns toward cashless barter transactions. |
Inc. October 1, 2000 Mary Kwak |
Trading Places Once a dusty corner of the economy, barter is emerging as a hot entrepreneurial niche and a valuable tool for cash-crunched companies... |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2006 Traci Purdum |
Reducing Inventory: Let's Make A Deal! Corporate barter is a way to recoup value on everything from capital equipment and hand tools to last year's fashions. |
Inc. June 2004 Lora Kolodny |
Take the Money As many entrepreneurs find out, lopsided barter deals struck in a company's early days have an expiration date. But good relationships shouldn't. |
Inc. October 1, 2000 Ilan Mochari |
Swap Talk Barter Web sites differ widely in inventory, ease of use, and customer service. Choosing one involves some trade-offs... |
Reason December 2002 Jesse Walker |
Argentine Revolution Even as Argentina's rulers contend with competing rehabilitation schemes, of domestic origin as well as foreign, ordinary Argentines are enacting reforms of their own, building parallel institutions to fill the void left by the collapsing state. |