Whenever someone is unwilling to provide a utility, one way to convince them to do so in todays monetary system is to offer more money.  In the Registry, you can do this as well, but the amount over and above the amount the provider has available in 'charge'  or cost of goods makes the cost to the enticer more than what is paid to the enticee, in the form of Transcients.  Here's how they work:

If the seller wants (or someone is competing to offer) more money than all cost of goods and charge the seller has or is willing to give up (because cost of goods may be tied to ownership), the purchaser can choose to buy Transcients from the Registry at a cost of 1 Exchange per Transient, and assign the owner to the seller.

The first Transcient that a member receives is immediately converted to an "Exchangable" Transcient, otherwise known as "Transcient Exchange".  A Transcient Exchange works just like a regular Exchange in a transaction, except once it's spent, it is destroyed, as opposed to being converted into Cost of Goods.  Each subsequent Transient received by the seller will not immediately convert into a Transient Exchange, it merely accumulates in their account and serves no purpose - it cannot be transfered or used to purchase anything on it's own.  As soon as a member has one more Transient then they do Transcient Exchange in their account, all Transient they own are immediately converted into ONE extra Transient Exchange.  This, essentially, makes the members next Transient Exchange one unit more expensive then the last.