newbie therapist in need of advice!
I also LOVE the idea of bartering.
I handle it this way:
First, I come up with a list of things I need/want enough to be willing to pay for. Do this BEFORE you are approached with a possible barter situation; this way, you're prepared without being put on the spot. (Good candidates to get your brainstorming juices flowing: massage therapy, acupuncture, hair color/cut/style, house cleaning, Whole Foods discounts, auto mechanic work, website design/build, advertising space, music lessons, handyman work, hand-made jewelry, petsitting/babysitting, etc. Heck I've bartered for chiropractic, ham/amateur radio gear, marketing/coaching/development, and lawn care LOL. My own list now consists of front desk/reception help and yoga/martial arts classes/instruction.)
Then, I show this list to anyone who indicates financial stress (caveat - anyone RELIABLE, down-to-earth/drama-free - go with your GUT on this one, and really listen to it). Maybe they can't pay for it out of pocket but they've got an amazing skill.
I repeat, be careful who you approach the subject with. No crazy/unstable people, flaky people, freebie-seeking people, etc.
Don't let yourself get talked into things that aren't on your list. I couldn't believe some of the inquiries we got - some people have no standards and no clue about your value. Don't be afraid to communicate it.
If they don't have anything I need, I give to those who give back - you can easily make business/post cards that have a "Thank you for your referrals!" message on them and hand them out by the handful (or keep them at your desk for clients to take) to clients. For every [x] number of new paying clients they refer, they get [x] amount off their next massage OR they get [x] extra add-on treatment at no cost (I typically prefer the latter, so as to avoid being seen as a discount person or otherwise degrade my services).
If they can't barter and can't refer, it's full price baby