SurplusStuff.com -- Company Overview


Surplus-Stuff.com is an Internet-based marketplace for businesses seeking to buy and sell excess inventory and idle assets. Surplus-Stuff.com was formed by MaineNet Enterprises in October 1998 and is headquartered in Columbus, Ohio.

Sellers from the construction industry list their items on Surplus-Stuff.com's market exchange, which includes over 100 industrial product categories.

Surplus-Stuff.com is a market maker intermediating buyers and sellers and providing them with easy to use, flexible online transaction capabilities. Surplus-Stuff.com is an independent exchange so it does not purchase assets, collect payments, fulfill purchase orders, nor represent any third parties.

Our Goal

The goal of Surplus-Stuff.com is clear: become the preferred Internet marketplace for the construction industry in the $300 billion unproductive asset marketplace. The Company will accomplish this by improving results for both buyers and sellers of these items.

Excess inventory and idle assets currently are sold, on a global basis, through a variety of inefficient distribution channels. Sellers get prices less than fair market value; buyers frequently cannot find the items they want, when they want them. Surplus-Stuff.com will reduce this friction and inefficiency by providing a central, Internet-based business-to-business market exchange. This Internet-based market exchange will enable a large universe of buyers and sellers to connect and conduct commerce online 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Surplus-Stuff.com is an independent business-to-business Internet exchange for companies seeking to buy and sell excess inventory and idle assets. SurplusStuff.com was created to solve the current inefficiencies within this fragmented market. Our goal is to improve results for both buyers and sellers.

Surplus-Stuff.com is one of the world’s first independent business-to-business Internet exchanges that is dedicated to buying and selling excess inventory and idle assets. Surplus-Stuff.com sells under-utilized assets from companies to other manufacturers, retailers, liquidators, jobbers and distributors.