Bad Debt
Signals That can Help You Avoid Bad Debt
Losses
Even good companies
can get into trouble and can’t pay their bills. Your credit risk is
determined to a great extent by your understanding of the credit health of
those businesses to which you extend credit. It pays to avoid losing money
to bad debt.
Here are six
credit warning signs that may indicate credit
trouble ahead before a meaningful change shows up in their credit rating –
which you should be monitoring in any case.
Six Credit warning signs:
-
Delays in payments.
This is an obvious sign and your accounts receivable system should be set
up to monitor and report on this on a continuous basis. Make sure you
have a team of managers who are in the loop so they can see this and any
of these other warning signs and take action quickly.
-
Changes in ordering
patterns.
-
The first sign may
be a slowing in order volume. This is usually an indication that your
customer is experiencing a slowdown in their business.
-
The last sign may
be a surprise order of a much larger size than usual. This could
indicate that your customer is trying to stock up in advance of getting
cut off.
-
Communication
problems. You or your staff may have more trouble than usual getting
through to your contacts at the company that owes you money. This is
especially worrisome when the usual channels of communication for
following up on open invoices suddenly slow down.
-
Pressuring the sales
force. Your sales force might start getting pressured to make sales in
spite of existing credit limits. This is the time to advise your sales
team to keep their eyes and ears open for any signs of trouble at the
customer or changes in the market.
-
The business sector
is in trouble. Know which sectors your customers service directly and
indirectly. Remember that that business slow-downs trickle down.
-
The grape vine is
humming. Keep your ears open for those tidbits of information that are
known to make their way through the industry. Ask all of your people who
are in the field or talk to people in the industry to pass on information
for the good of the company. Use any “casual” information legally and
responsibly and only with appropriate verifications.
Manage your credit risk deliberately
It is very costly to
write off bad debt because you not only lose the profit on the original
sales (if derived from sales) but you also have to make additional sales to
cover the cost of sales just to break even. Then
you have to make additional sales to make a profit.
Profit Improvement
Bad debt is a profit
killer. A good profit improvement process invariably includes measures to
reduce losses. Don’t give your profits away.
Read
“Instant Profits: Making Your
Business Pay” for over 250 ways to improve your business even in a
recession.
Get your
costs and bottom line profits
under control now