|
Cashflow Problems: How to Get Your
Money
One of the most common problems that affects businesses is that
their customers owe them money. When you've done the work but
people are being slow to pay you, you can get behind with bills
and be short of money to invest in your business. This is,
understandably, an annoying situation -- you're being chased
for debts that other people refuse to pay. There are, though, a
few ways to improve your customers' payment speed.
Remember You're a Credit Provider
When you do work and invoice afterwards you are extending
credit to your customers. As such, if the cost is going to be
high, you should consider running a credit check on them before
you start work. This will show you whether the company you're
about to do work for is in trouble, and can help avoid lots of
problems later on. You can usually run credit checks online for
next to nothing.
Give Invoices a Due Date
A mistake many home businesses make is to send invoices that
have a fancy layout and say how much the customer owes, but
don't contain any direct instruction to pay now. This results
in customers receiving the invoice and putting it on their
'unimportant chores' pile -- you know, the one that doesn't get
done for months.
To avoid this, a good strategy is to give your invoices a due
date. Set it two or three weeks from when you sent the invoice,
and make sure you highlight it. People will see your deadline
and realize that you mean business -- they'll think 'oh, I'd
better deal with this' and you'll get your payment sooner
rather than later. If you don't, a follow-up phone call saying
'I wonder if you realized that your invoice's due date was
yesterday...' will usually do the trick. Almost no-one refuses
to pay if you confront them directly -- they just do it because
they think they can get away with it.
In some places, the practice of putting due dates on your
invoices might even entitle you to charge interest on money you
are owed, or charge fees. Check your local laws.
You Could Try Debt Factoring
Some businesses have success with a technique called 'debt
factoring'. This is when you sell your invoices to a third
party who specialize in administration and collection, and they
give you the money for the invoice straightaway instead of you
having to wait for the customer.
If you try this approach, though, you should consider the
percentage of your invoices that the company is taking, and
whether they're treating your customers the way you would want
them to be treated. It might be best to only sell invoices to
debt factoring companies when they haven't been paid by the due
date, letting them act more like a collections agency.
Collections Agencies
Of course, your last resort is to sell the debt to a
collections agency. This will cost you around 10% of the debt.
The collections agency will try to intimidate your customer
into paying, ultimately taking them to court if necessary, and
they might try seizing the customer's assets. Make sure you
check out the agency you plan to use beforehand, though -- you
don't want them to be doing anything illegal.
You should always try to talk to the customer before you take
this route, as if they're not paying the chances are that
there's a reason. You might be about to force them out of
business. On the other hand, they might just be forgetful, in
which case they won't be too happy about you setting debt
collectors on them.
Be Prepared to Settle
Sooner or later, you might end up being owed money by a
business that is in financial trouble -- you're just one in a
long list of creditors, as everything falls down around them.
In this situation, you need to be prepared to settle with them
for less than the original invoice price, or you risk getting
nothing. It is a bad situation to be in, but it's better to
give someone a break and get some money instead of pushing them
further towards bankruptcy and getting nothing.
|