Platform Fee Adalah
Booking fee dalam Kamus Dunia Property Real Estate di Indonesia, Maka Booking fee merupakan kata kata yang sering digunakan oleh para pelaku industri properti baik developer properti maupun makelar broker properti. Meskipun kata kata tersebut jarang sekali dimengerti Sebagian Banyak Orang pada umumnya.
Booking fee adalah Dalam dunia KPR, booking fee adalah bukti keseriusan pembeli untuk membeli rumah. Dengan membayar booking fee atau dalam istilah lain “Uang Tanda Jadi”, calon pembeli berhak memilih kaveling dan developer berkewajiban memblokir kaveling tersebut dari penawaran pihak lain. Dengan memblokir kaveling dari penawaran pihak lain, pihak developer dirugikan jika nantinya calon pembeli membatalkan pembeliannya. Sebagai konsekuensinya, booking fee biasanya hangus dan menjadi hak developer.
Penggunaan makna istilah Booking fee sendiri dalam industri properti adalah biaya yang dibayarkan oleh calon penyewa atau pembeli properti sebagai tanda jadi atau jaminan bahwa mereka serius dalam niat mereka untuk menyewa atau membeli properti tersebut. Ini umumnya merupakan sejumlah uang yang dibayarkan kepada agen properti atau pemilik properti untuk mengamankan properti sebelum transaksi sebenarnya dilakukan. Booking fee tidak selalu diterapkan dalam semua transaksi properti, dan kebijakan dan besaran booking fee dapat bervariasi.
Penggunaan makna booking fee dalam industri properti adalah untuk:
Semoga penjelasan definisi kosakata Booking fee dapat menambah wawasan serta pengetahuan anda dalam berkomunikasi secara lisan atau tertulis.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fees charged for supply chain participation or retail space allocation
A slotting fee, slotting allowance,[1] pay-to-stay, or fixed trade spending[2] is a fee charged to produce companies or manufacturers by supermarket distributors (retailers) in order to have their product placed on their shelves or within their supply chain.[3][4] The fee varies greatly depending on the product, manufacturer, and market conditions. For a new product, the initial slotting fee may be approximately US$25,000 per item in a regional cluster of stores, but may be as high as US$250,000 in high-demand markets.[5]
In addition to slotting fees, retailers may also charge promotional, advertising and stocking fees. According to a Federal Trade Commission study, the practice is "widespread" in the supermarket industry.[6] Many grocers earn more profit from agreeing to carry a manufacturer's product than they do from actually selling the product to retail consumers. Fees may serve to efficiently allocate scarce retail shelf space, help balance the risk of new product failure between manufacturers and retailers, help manufacturers signal private information about potential success of new products, and serve to widen retail distribution for manufacturers by mitigating retail competition.[7] For vendors, slotting fees may be a move by the grocery industry to profit at their suppliers' expense.[8]
Some companies argue that slotting fees are unethical as they create a barrier to entry for smaller businesses that do not have the cash flow to compete with large companies. The use of slotting fees can, in some instances, lead to abuse by retailers such as in the case where a bakery firm was asked for a six figure fee to carry its items for a specific period with no guarantee its products would be carried in future periods.[9]
The same practice is also common in major bookstore chains in the US, dating from as far back as the mid-nineties.[10]