Kathryn lives in a relatively small town, one where she feels she won't be able to get many trades, so she has decided to short-change herself and wait until school starts and she moves back to her college town to keep trading. This means that she will only be trading for half the lifetime of the competition, severely handicapping herself.
Kathryn seems to think she can't trade in her hometown. I grew up in the same place, and once went from a paperclip to a formal gown with matching shoes and wrap in only two trades. It can certainly be done. If she would read the Top Ten Tips I posted last week, she could be highly competitive in the time before she moves. I've suggested it in a burst of good sportsmanship, and kept quiet since on account of my sense of competition.
In the meantime, my life got rather busy, so I have only made one trade since my last Trade-Off update. I made my trade using Tip #5 from last week - "Target people whose interests you are ware of." You may recall that the week before last I had a bottle of wine, a picture-poster, and two science fiction books. The rules of the competition state that I must trade all of these objects in my next encounter. The question I therefore posed myself was, "Who do I know who would like all of these things?" The answer was my father.
Luckily, I was headed home that weekend anyhow. I presented my collection of objects to my dad, who spent the weekend thinking, then came back with two proposals. I took the second: a different bottle of wine, a glass decanter, and six wine glasses that match the decanter.
This trade is a good example of a mixed-value trade. To my dad, the bottle of Merlot was what had value. He didn't really want the decanter set anyway, so it had little value to him. This concept is something any barterer can utilize to his or her advantage. It is the fact which the successful trader uses to get people to throw things in at the last second, things which may not mean much to the other person but which can be a positive addition to the barterer's cache. The barterer need not name what (s)he wishes the other party to add to the offer; simply politely expressing disapproval with the standing offer is usually sufficient to cause the other party to give a better offer, or to add something to the standing offer.
Happy trading!
-The Egg
