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Manage Debtors And Creditors To Improve Liquidity
by: Terry Cartwright
Sales turnover and net profits may follow a rollercoaster
pattern familiar to most business but when the cash flow dries
up the game is over. Urgent attention to the management of
working capital can provide every business with the cash
resources to exploit its potential
Most businesses will experience periods of lower sales and times
when losses may be incurred as expenses exceed sales income. The
situation is recoverable by producing higher sales and reducing
costs and expenses. A business that runs out of cash resources
is dead in the water.
Debtors and sales income management
The objective is to obtain payment from customers as fast as
possible improving cash flow and minimising the risk of bad
debts and not being paid at all.
Payment terms offered to customers should be clearly stated and
fixed as standard accounting figures according to the amount of
funding the business is prepared to offer its clients. Because
that is exactly what credit terms to customers is, free cash
funding in exchange for eventual sales income.
Consideration should be given to using a cash discount system to
encourage sales invoices to be paid faster. In some businesses
it would be appropriate to obtain up front deposits and
scheduled payments. Review this practise to obtain a greater
proportion of payments faster to improve liquidity.
New customers should be subjected to a strict credit check. All
new customers where credit check details are not available
should be invoiced by the accounting function on a pro forma
basis. Any businesses who fail to meet the highest credit score
required should remain on a pro forma invoice basis.
The credit control function needs consideration from the first
step of issuing customers with a sales invoice, producing
customer statements of the debt owed and a set procedure of
credit control letters and telephone follow ups that actually
achieve the end result of getting the cash in. An essential
process in the credit control procedure would be to ensure the
accountant or bookkeeper always issues sales invoices and
customer statements promptly.
Incorporate into the terms of trade a set of rules to invoke
interest payments for late payment and late payment debt
recovery costs. In the UK the Late Payment of Commercial Debts
(Interest) Act 1998 sets out the statutory rights of business to
claim interest and costs.
Consider the possibility of factoring sales invoices due from
debtors either by selling the sales invoices to a third party or
raising cash on the value of those invoices pending payment.
Factoring has the disadvantage of often not being cheap but does
have the advantage of generating a regular stream of cash.
Bad debts have a double impact on any business and all possible
steps should be taken to reduce the risk. A bad debt not only
uses valuable resources in chasing the debt with the negative
impact on cash flow and liquidity but also is a straight loss to
the net profit and a strong indicator that the accounting
function is failing the business.
Creditors and expenditure
management
The objective is to extend the time allowed for payment of
expenses the business incurs.
Consider the frequency of all payments made to suppliers. Small
business have alternative payment terms available for the
payment of taxes. In the UK value added tax can be paid
quarterly or monthly, vat cash accounting can ease the tax
liability due in critical periods and paye payments can be paid
quarterly rather than monthly for smaller businesses.
Every opportunity should be considered to improve liquidity and
that would include the frequency which employee salaries and
wages are paid. A sensitive area since it involves the most
important people to the business success but adopting a payment
period to coincide with the receipt of cash from customers may
in some circumstances balance liquidity.
General creditors are a major area to be addressed in terms of
both the amount of credit received from suppliers and the time
required to pay those creditor accounts. Larger orders on
extended payments terms creates a risk area should the goods not
be used but can greatly assist cash flow as the business is
effectively borrowing free cash from its suppliers.
Stock levels are crucial to financial management of the creditor
total. High stock levels use valuable working capital which is
offset in part by the level of creditors. Higher levels of stock
financed by free credit from creditors lowers the cash flow
requirements on the other parts of the business.
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