Inventory overload can be a serious financial drag for your business. But what to do with excess items – no matter what they are or where they came from – can be a difficult dilemma. Selling it through normal channels may be out of the question. After all, that's why you have the surplus.
And – especially if your surplus is new or unexpected – you probably have little patience or time for figuring out what to do with it. But there are several means at your disposal that can either net you a cash return on your items, or a nifty tax write-off for goods donated to a qualified charity. Five directions to go include:
Unload in bulk, b2b
Retailers, wholesalers, manufacturers, distributors and others sell goods via centralized liquidation auctions.
I recommend: Liquidation.com is a b2b bulk marketplace where companies sell all kinds of excess goods. See
How to Sell (PDF). Liquidation.com welcomes inventory from small businesses to sell on the auction marketplace, and has a track record of providing returns higher than other liquidation methods. (Nearly a half million small businesses also use
Liquidation.com as a source of inventory for resale to consumers.)
Net instant cash on your excess inventory
Avoid the bother of auctions by selling to a surplus inventory liquidator.
I recommend: Instant Liquidators,
Merchandise USA and
Power Retailing buy a wide range of customer-returned and excess inventory.
Excess Technologies is a professional surplus inventory
liquidator.
Run your own private online auction
And guess who's going to help you do it – eBay, of course, the online auction king.
I recommend: eBay Private Marketplace is your own private-label, e-commerce site to liquidate excess inventory only to your invited buyers. Your Private Marketplace will have its own Web address and its own look-and-feel, but be hosted and supported by eBay technology. (For businesses with at least $2 million in excess inventory annually.)
Donate your new and qualifying excess goods for a juicy tax deduction
Your corporation can earn an above-cost, federal income tax deduction, clear out warehouse space, avoid liquidation nightmares and help schools and nonprofits.
I recommend: NAEIR, The National Association for the Exchange of Industrial Resources, takes donations of new, overstock or discontinued product and redistributes that product to schools and nonprofit groups nationwide. Donor companies can receive an enhanced income tax deduction of up to twice the cost of the goods, courtesy of Internal Revenue Tax Code Section 170 (e)(3). NAEIR takes donations of general, consumer goods such as school and office supplies, toys, games, building materials, clothing, tools, and much more. NAEIR provides the paperwork to aid in filing taxes. See
how it works.