Small
businesses can take steps to speed up customer payments
by
Joyce M. Rosenberg
Associated
Press
Getting
slowpoke customers to pay their bills on time–or reasonably
on time–can be a vexing problem for a small business owner.
Besides creating cash flow issues, late payments can be
a time and energy waster if it takes phone calls and e‑mails
to get a customer to finally send a check.
Business
owners who have struggled with the problem have a variety
of ways to deal with the problem, including educating
customers about payment terms, insisting on a substantial
deposit before work begins, and hiring someone to keep
after the foot‑draggers.
Some
business owners have found that unless they’re very clear
at the beginning about payment terms, customers may take
their time. It’s human nature to put things off, and all
of us have to prioritize what we use money for. But if
a company states from the get‑go: “Here is how we
need to be paid,” a customer is more likely to get the
message.
Dana
Korey lost time and productivity at her professional organizing
business trying to collect on invoices weeks or months
after they were sent out. Korey, founder of Away With
Clutter Inc. in Del Mar, Calif., said “being really clear
about the deposit and being exceptionally clear about
the day the balance would be due” turned the situation
around.
Korey
raised the deposit to 60 percent from 50 percent, and
put payment terms in bold‑faced type in contracts
and had customers sign or initial every provision that
dealt with payment. Employees also state the payment terms
aloud during the contract signing process.
“It
actually has worked phenomenally,” she said of the changes.
The
situation was even more critical at Gini Dietrich’s public
relations firm. She said Chicago‑based Arment Dietrich
would have had to go out of business because of slow payments
if she hadn’t implemented a payment policy, because its
cash flow was so poor “Literally,
I was playing bank for my clients,” she recalled.
Her
solution has been to require two months’ retainer fees
up front, refuse to give discounts for early payments
and insist on out‑of‑pocket expenses to be
paid up front.
And,
if an invoice is more than 45 days past due, work on the
project stops immediately. The result: Dietrich stayed
in business and has a healthy cash flow.
Carol
Borow and Dan Venet say their slow‑payment problems
have been made easier because they have an employee whose
duties include calling customers who haven’t paid yet.
Borow and Venet, who own CHB Industries Inc., a New York‑based
provider of window film, don’t spend their time chasing
late payments unless the situation really demands their
intervention.
Borow
and Venet, whose customers include construction firms,
are to some extent stuck with the bill‑paying practices
of the construction industry. Other industries, such as
apparel retailing, have their own customs that an entrepreneur
often has to contend with.
Borow
said CHB is often one of the last to work on a project,
and so it’s often paid last. But Venet said the company
has found some ways to speed up the process, such as talking
to the end user–a building owner–who will then lean on
the slow‑paying construction firm. “Very often they
know about us and they think well of us. They’re interested”
in helping CHB, he said.
Like
other business owners, they’ve learned to get whatever
payment they can before they start working. “It’s often
very helpful to make sure that payment terms are negotiated
up front, and if you can get a deposit up front, that’s
better,” Borow said.
Small
business owners who want to develop a payment policy have
plenty of resources, starting with other company owners–especially
if they’re in the same industry–and their accountants.
Talking to veterans of the bill‑paying wars can
help you figure out what kind of terms you want to institute.
But
there are things you can do that go beyond contract terms.
For companies that deal with other businesses, having
a good relationship with open lines of communication can
help ease the process. So if you or one of your top employees
needs to prod your customer for a payment, the phone call
will be a reminder not only of the obligation that needs
to be met, but also of the fact that there’s a good relationship
that needs to be preserved.
And,
remember, sometimes customers don’t pay because they’re
unhappy with the job. Having good communications can help
head off that problem, allowing you to hear that something’s
wrong and take steps to fix it long before an invoice
becomes past due.