written on June 06, 2011 by John Doucette
Related Items
- Invoicing Practices and Collection Effectiveness
-
written on December 01, 2011
by John Doucette
- Benchmarking Collection Performance
-
written on September 27, 2011
by John Doucette
- The Cost of Extending Credit
-
written on April 21, 2011
by John Doucette
- Tips for Making Effective Collection Calls
-
written on March 04, 2011
by John Doucette
- Invoicing and the Collections Process
-
written on March 01, 2011
by John Doucette
- Best Practices for Collections
-
written on September 24, 2010
by John Doucette
- Collections Means Customer Service
-
written on September 08, 2009
by William Kesman
- Make a Wise Investment Partnering with a Collections Agency
-
written on August 04, 2009
by William Kesman
- Developing a Steadfast Collection Policy
-
written on July 20, 2009
by William Kesman
- Getting Back To Basics
-
written on June 15, 2009
by William Kesman
- Is Credit and Collections Making History
-
written on June 03, 2009
by William Kesman
- Making the Collection
-
written on May 11, 2009
by William Kesman
View All
More By This Expert
-
Invoicing Practices and Collection Effectiveness
-
written on December 01, 2011 by John Doucette
-
Benchmarking Collection Performance
-
written on September 27, 2011 by John Doucette
-
The Cost of Extending Credit
-
written on April 21, 2011 by John Doucette
-
Collection Call Tips
-
written on March 04, 2011 by John Doucette
-
Invoicing and the Collections Process
-
written on March 01, 2011 by John Doucette
-
Ohio Business Lending Clearinghouse
-
written on October 18, 2010 by John Doucette
-
Best Practices for Collections
-
written on September 24, 2010 by John Doucette
-
SBA Microloans Loans from Lenders You Never Heard Of
-
written on August 31, 2010 by John Doucette
-
The CIT Bankruptcy and its Impact on Small Businesses
-
written on November 05, 2009 by John Doucette
-
Banks Increase Small Business Lending
-
written on August 24, 2009 by John Doucette
-
Easy Ways to Improve Cash Flow
-
written on January 02, 2009 by John Doucette
-
Turn Invoices into Cash
-
written on August 25, 2008 by John Doucette
-
What to Do When the Bank Says NO -- An Overview of Alternative Sources of Capital
-
written on June 23, 2008 by John Doucette
View All
Two things are true for most businesses: a significant percentage of sales (and therefore receivables) are concentrated in a small percentage of customers and they have insufficient staff resources to contact every customer about past due payments. I suggest adopting a collection strategy that identifies priority accounts for ongoing personal attention and uses efficient automated processes to contact the others.
Start by creating a “Top 20” list that is composed of these priority customers. Usually about 20% of your active customer base accounts for 80% of the activity and you should focus your limited collection resources on these customers where personal contact will have the maximum impact. The number of customers on the list will be determined by your available staff resources – how many relationships can they manage given the time they have available for collection activity?
Create the list by evaluating accounts across several dimensions:
-
Account balance Obviously, large amounts are your primary focus.
-
Payment history Are they slow and erratic payers or do they pay consistently without the need for reminders?
-
Purchase history You have more leverage over customers that purchase frequently and who may be dependent on your for products or services that are critical to their business.
-
History of interactions Are they easy or difficult to work with? As painful as it may be, limited resources should be directed at the tough collection situations.
-
General collection risk A high-level assessment of a customer’s ability to pay based on their industry and location will also come into play.
-
Specific collection risk Likewise, company information (e.g. length of time in business) is also a predictor of collection rise.
-
Profit margin on sales Low margin accounts are high priority because carrying costs erode profit so the sooner you collect the better.
Determine who is on the list by analyzing aging reports and history of customer activity and interactions. A collections automation tool like Anytime Collect would be helpful in large, dynamic environments by bringing all this information together in one place. The actual number of accounts that can be managed will depend on the collections staff resources available. The list should be reviewed at least quarterly to reflect changes in your account base (new customers coming on board, old ones that stop buying)
Once you have the list you can start managing collections more effectively.
-
Learn about them Document their purchasing and payment history. If they are a large company that always pays in 60 days set that as your expectation. If they have specific paperwork requirements to get an invoiced processed through their system be sure the people in your organization that do the billing are aware of them.
-
Identify key personnel Identify and build relationships with the individuals at each customer who are involved in the payment process – AP clerk, approving managers, CFO/Controller, etc. Obtain accurate contact information and determine their preferred mode of contact. Some people prefer email, others like faxes or phone calls.
-
Establish policies for collections I have talked about collection strategies and variations on those strategies in previous posts. Be open to establishing highly customized strategies for collecting from your largest customers. Adapting to their procedures and protocol will be a big help in moving paperwork through the system.
-
Monitor changes in payment or purchase activity A slowdown in payments could be a signal of financial trouble at this customer and bears watching. Large purchases that are outside of previous practices should also be watched. Pay particular attention to new customers that suddenly make a significant purchase. Call before and invoice is due in these situations to verify that it is legitimate and will be paid in due course.
Automate contacts with the 80% of customers who are not on this list.
-
Identify key personnel As above, identify the individuals at each customer who are involved in the payment process. Accurate contact information is essential. It is important to know that messages are getting to the right person.
-
Establish policies for collections As above, define specific actions to be taken at milestones in the collection of a past due account. If possible, use an automated process to identify past due invoices on a daily or weekly basis. Remember, you don’t have to follow up past due invoices at 30-day intervals. Particularly as they get older more frequent contact is appropriate.
-
Standard document templates Develop a series of standard collection documents with specific and escalating messages to support collection actions. Ideally, these can be sent out through a mail merge process.
-
Vary communication methods Alternate the method of communication (email, letter, and fax) in order to maximize the likelihood that the message will get to the intended recipient.
-
Monitor delivery failures Investigate any communications that bounce. Personnel turnover or transient technical issues can lead to an email not being delivered and a follow up call is in order. Returned mail is a serious issue and requires immediate escalation.
-
Consider outsourcing Many third-party collection agencies are expanding their services in this area and can represent you as a first party for these non-critical accounts. Generally this entails a fixed cost per account or invoice and the customer is not being put in “collection”. You keep 100% of the payments collected but there are no guarantees – you pay for the service regardless, although economies of scale make it possible for large agencies to perform these routine collection activities for much less than you could yourself. Automated phone calls are often an option from these sources and provide another mode of contact.
Another way to cope with limited resources is to send accounts to collection earlier. If your internal efforts are not working, call in the pros and stop wasting your time. That frees up time to be directed towards accounts where the interaction can make a difference. This applies even to priority accounts, though you may want to take care in referring such a customer. However, a good agency should be able to get payment from a customer without blowing up the relationship. When you are considering engaging an agency make sure that they have experience in commercial collections. The techniques used for collecting consumer debt do not all carry over well to collecting from a business.
John Doucette
Anytime Collect Product Specialist
e2b software
(440) 352-4700 x249
jdoucette@e2bsoft.com
www.anytimecollect.com
Anytime Collect – Because we knew there was an easier way to collect A/R!