INDEPENDENT NEWS

Newest Barter Exchange On The Block Growing Fast

Published: Wed 24 Nov 2004 04:03 PM
Nov 24 2004
Newest Barter Exchange On The Block Growing Fast
Around 150 businesses are now joining Ozone each month. The New Zealand member-owned barter exchange is just coming up to the end of its first full year in business and membership is in reach of the four-figure threshold.
Ozone Barter opened its doors only last November but already clients have joined from all business sectors and every city in New Zealand, says the company.
Up to now, transactions have been made using a combination of cheque-like vouchers and the internet, but as business has grows an electronic card-based system has been developed. Ozone Barter Ltd have entered a "one-off" agreement with Westpac who work in partnership with card terminal supplier Provenco.
Westpac have a significant slice of the NZ card processing EFTPOS market, and according to its national associations manager, Martin Welsh 'With our experience and expertise in card payments we will deliver Ozone's technology solution in weeks rather than months'.
'Typically clients increase sales, spread their customer base, and often sidestep cash-flow problems for quicker access to the varied products and services they need to grow their companies' says Marilyn Burnet, the company's marketing manager, of the benefits of Ozone Barter.
'We have sold high-value items such as catamarans and cars, photocopiers and even engagement rings' she says 'But of course we also have a range of business essentials available on barter which help our customers reduce their daily cash expenses as well.
Internet access, water coolers, tea and coffee, stationery, printing, accommodation and car repairs are all extremely popular and help a business conserve its cash for wages and rent.'
'Barter is the art of trading what you have, for what you want. Many entrepreneurs and large corporations prefer to keep their money in the bank as they expand their business,' she says.
Taxation is no problem: trade dollars are accepted as 'real' cash, both for sales, purchases and GST, she says.
'We've won business we never would have seen otherwise', says sign-writer and engraver Mark Perkins of MAP Design 'We have built up trade dollars, and purchased computers, car repairs, gifts and other items that we would have otherwise had to use cash to pay for. This has allowed us to re-invest the cash into our own business'.
ENDS

Next in Business, Science, and Tech

Global Screen Industry Unites For Streaming Platform Regulation And Intellectual Property Protections
By: SPADA
General Practices Begin Issuing Clause 14 Notices In Relation To The NZNO Primary Practice Pay Equity Claim
By: Genpro
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media