Accounting & tax

How to effectively control your customers credit

A series of monitors at desks , as an overblown example of how you could monitor and control customer credit

Cash flow problems are the main reason many small businesses go to the wall every year. It doesn’t matter how profitable a company is on paper, if the customers are not paying their invoices, the cashflow will soon dry up, and the business won’t be able to pay its operating expenses. One way to avoid this catastrophe is to have robust credit control procedures in place from the very beginning.

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New customer credit control

New customers are an unknown quantity. You have no idea whether they will pay their invoices on time, so it pays to be prudent before placing all of your eggs in one basket. Before agreeing to do some work for a new customer, make sure you do the following:

Monitor existing customers

Have a credit control system in place

Never let late payments slide more than a week. Keep a close eye on your sales ledger and make sure you are always aware of any outstanding accounts.

In  order to get paid, call up the customer and find out when payment is likely to be forthcoming – and don’t be fobbed off with excuses such as: ‘the cheque is in the post.’ Be polite at all times, but be prepared to take the matter further if payment does not materialise. Sometimes the threat of further action is enough to persuade a customer to settle their debt, but just in case you are forced to take the matter further, keep a record of all correspondence.

It is easy to forget about credit control when you are caught up in the day to day running of a small business. After all, there are a million and one tasks you need to take care of, so chasing customers up for non-payment of invoices may not be high on your list of ‘things to do’. But it should be—it only takes one or two large outstanding invoices on the books to damage cash flow, so make credit control a priority at all times.

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