ADVANTAGES
OF OUTSIDE COLLECTIONS
1.
You are a specialist at what you do. Collection firms do not typically
design their own computer systems, nor do they build their own office
furniture, nor do they manufacture telephone, photocopier or other
office equipment. We don't all clean our own offices, or plow snow
or mow lawns or do landscaping or cater our office parties. We often
retain outside companies to help us in performing these services
for us. Why not consider hiring us to help you with an area in which
we are intimately familiar, so you can use your time and resources
elsewhere (on more profitable customers, for instance)?
2. Putting some distance between yourself and your
office staff once your customer becomes delinquent is generally
considered to be more professional. This may, in turn, increase
the likelihood that the customer will return to you, on your terms,
in the future. Do your best to avoid burning bridges - use a professional
to represent you.
3. Delegating responsibility for collection of
delinquent accounts to professionals outside your organization should
remove concern that your collection techniques may violate state
or federal laws.
4. In many jurisdictions, corporations must be
represented in Court by an attorney (there is no such thing as a
pro se corporation in many jurisdictions).
5. Failing to pursue delinquent accounts (or pursuing
them ineffectively) may attract more delinquent accounts as "word
may get out” that you are an easy mark for high risk debtors.
TIPS
FOR BEFORE YOU GET A CUSTOMER
IN TODAY'S SUPER-COMPETITIVE
BUSINESS WORLD, companies which place too many demands on prospective
clients can lose the sale. Yet, companies which are too lenient
in extending credit or in pursuing delinquent customer accounts
receivable can become easy targets for non-paying customers, which
threaten the company's profitability, and maybe even threaten the
company's continued existence.
It's a balancing act, to be sure, but we offer some suggestions
which may help - you can decide which ones you can implement without
risking customer alienation.
1. Require completion of a comprehensive credit application;
possibly require submission of a nominal payment for processing
(or as a deposit or retainer which you can credit against the first
sale), or submission of a voided check by the customer to you.
WHY? You want to obtain asset information, particularly
bank information, in order to be able to enforce a judgment, if
necessary, at a later date.
2. Obtain personal guarantees, if possible, particularly
on new enterprises.
WHY? Enforcing a judgment on a business without
assets (or one which has ceased to operate) is fruitless. In addition,
you may not be aware that the business has UCC filings, mortgages
or judgments outstanding, all of which can put you far down the
creditor list. While an individual can also be without assets, with
liens, or can die, or can file for bankruptcy, it is to your advantage
to have the option of pursuing the individual; it is simply an additional
source of payment, and, if the customer's company goes bad, it may
be the only source for some recovery.
3. Get customer signatures on all appropriate documents,
even if only by fax.
WHY? Certainly, oral contracts are valid. However,
they are enormously difficult to prove, particularly when the other
side is looking to avoid payment. If you don't obtain the signature,
and you eventually sue the customer, you should not be surprised
if the customer asserts that there is no contract, or that the contract
is not as you think it is, or that you failed to live up to the
contract in some way (by raising affirmative defenses or even a
filing a counterclaim for damages against your company), in order
to buy more time, or to obtain a result which is more to their liking,
through advantageous use of the legal system. Get the signature,
set out to defeat the credibility of bogus defenses, and hopefully
you will see more of your money sooner.
4. Obtain a social security number or employer identification
number (EIN) for your customer before extending credit.
WHY? If the customer's account becomes delinquent,
you will only be able to do credit reporting if you have this information.
Also, having this information makes it easier to "skip-trace"
those debtors who move without leaving a forwarding address, and
it also makes it somewhat easier to locate their assets in the post-judgment
phase of the case.
5. Do not accept a Post Office box as the only customer
address. Get a street address as well.
WHY? Suit papers cannot be served on a P.O. Box.
Even though the customer prefers to receive mail there, they obviously
are not conducting their business inside the box. There must be
a physical location, and you are entitled to know where it is. If
the customer refuses, I suggest you write to the Postmaster and
ask for the street address under the Freedom of Information Act.
Then, before extending credit, you may correspond with the customer
at that address, if you wish, in order to verify that it is current.
This way, if the customer closes the P.O. Box, you have another
way of finding them.
6. Include terms on your invoices or bills (or, better yet,
on your credit application) which allow you to charge "18%
per annum or the maximum interest rate allowed by law, as well as
reasonable attorney's fees (of at least 20%) and court costs on
all past due balances." Get a customer signature on the documents
which contain these terms.
WHY? Under the law in most jurisdictions, you can
only charge these amounts if you can prove that the customer accepted
these terms. Otherwise, you have to accept the "statutory"
interest rate (usually 6%) and cannot look to the other side for
payment of your attorney's fees. The ideal scenario is to obtain
a customer signature on each document which sets forth these terms;
but even if you don't, you should include these terms on bills,
invoices and statements, and consider obtaining a "Proof of
Mailing" from the U.S. Postal Service to prove that you mailed
these documents and that the customer never objected to their content.
Even if you don't intend to collect these additional amounts, you
can use the possibility that the customer may eventually be found
to be responsible for these amounts, in order to settle the matter
without negotiating away any of the principal balance owed.
7. Consider taking a security interest in your customer's
property (especially if you are selling them this very same property).
WHY? Although this will cost some money to set
up, this can put you in a better position to collect relative to
"unsecured" creditors, both in the regular court system
and in case of your customer's bankruptcy.
8. If at all possible, obtain a spouse's signature or guarantee
when extending credit to a married individual; similarly, obtain
a parent or guardian's signature as a guarantor, whenever possible,
especially if you are furnishing goods or services to a minor.
WHY? In some jurisdictions, including Pennsylvania,
for example, it is very difficult, if not impossible to enforce
a judgment against a married individual when all of his/her property
is owned jointly with the spouse. You may have to wait until the
death of one spouse or divorce to collect your money. In the case
of a minor, in nearly all jurisdictions, a contract with a minor
is "voidable" by the minor - meaning, in plain English,
that you could provide goods or services to a minor, and the minor
could declare that the transaction is an unenforceable contract.
It's always a better idea to have "backup" people accept
written responsibility for payment.
Remember, as much as you want to respect the customer's wishes in
order to make the sale, you should give consideration to the notion
that if the customer refuses to submit to some or all of the above
suggestions, it may be an indication that the customer knows that
it cannot live up to your demand of timely payment. This is your
chance to evaluate whether you feel that this customer will be an
asset or a liability to you.
You can even turn this hesitance into a selling point. Here's how:
Prospective customer: "I don't know about all of these terms.
It seems like you don't trust me. I don't need this; I'll just deal
with your competitor."
Your Salesperson says: "I respect that you have a hard time
with these terms. Our company is committed to ensuring that we do
not carry delinquent accounts. It's not that we don't trust you;
it's that we have to be fair to all of our customers by having them
on the same payment terms. I am sure that you want us to give you
the best price terms that we can offer, and to give you the best
service that we can offer, and with these terms, we are affirming
our commitment to our customers that they will not have to bear
the burden of non-paying customers. Besides, if you are current
in payment, you will have nothing to worry about."
TIPS
FOR AFTER YOU GET A CUSTOMER, BUT BEFORE (OR WHILE) A CUSTOMER BECOMES
DELINQUENT
1. Make
photocopies of checks used by customers in payment on any invoice
or bill. If this is impractical, you should do it for all new customers,
and then verify that this information is still accurate when subsequent
payments come in.
WHY? Bank information (as well as other asset information)
is crucial to enforcement of judgments. This small investment of
time, to record information which is in your hands for only a short
period of time, can pay great dividends later.
2. Turn over delinquent accounts for outside collection
quickly - after the first broken promise, NSF check or refused or
unreturned telephone calls.
WHY? There is a significant drop-off in the collectability
of accounts after 90 days past due, and then again after 180 days.
In fact, a recent survey by the Commercial Law League of America
found that the chances of collecting an account placed after 90
days is 72%; after 180 days, 44%, and after one year, 29%. While
it is true that turning over accounts comes at the expense of a
fee, you should view this step as a necessary one, where you hire
experienced professionals to do something for you, in order that
you may spend your valuable time and resources on more profitable
customers. Not only are successful collections like "found
money," they also serve as a message that your business is
not an "easy mark," and will hopefully deter future delinquencies,
not only from the customer in question, but also from all of your
current and prospective customers.
Also, there are practical concerns about being able to successfully
document and prove a collection case after significant time has
elapsed (i.e., your staff may change, your record-keeping may call
for the purging of accounts, the customer could relocate). Most
important of all, the statute of limitations may bar a collection
action after the passage of too much time from the date of contract
(as little as three years in some jurisdictions, as long as six
years in others).
3. Always credit customers' payments to their oldest invoice
or bill (unless they specify otherwise in writing).
WHY? This goes directly to the statute of limitations
issue. Let's assume that you have a relationship with customer which
goes back over ten years, and that this customer was never current
in payment, yet made consistent late payments so that the size of
the past due balance remained relatively constant, on average, through
time. If you credit payments to the newest invoices, you will have
a delinquency which is over ten years old, and thus, time-barred
by the statute of limitations. If, however, you credit payments
to the oldest invoices, you will technically have a zero balance
(even after adding finance charges on a monthly basis) as of approximately
the date where the total of most recent purchases, when added together
from most recent to oldest, equals the total balance due. This will
invariably produce a more recent date for the start of the delinquency,
which, for these purposes, is to your advantage.
4. Get delinquent customers' promises to pay in writing.
WHY? If your customer promises now to pay at some
point in the future, this can only be viewed as an attempt to "buy
time." While it may be true that your customer does not have
the money at this time, use this situation to your advantage, by
agreeing to wait a short time (no more than 30 days), but only if
your customer puts this promise to pay in writing. Remember, each
stage of conducting business consists of exchanging something of
value; when a customer becomes delinquent; this temporarily upsets
that balance of exchange. In order to avoid being totally at the
mercy of this customer, you should set out to continue the "give
and take," rather than pleading for payment. Remember, you
can always say "enough is enough" and file suit - you
are doing your customer a favor by not doing so, and you should
be rewarded with a favor in exchange.
If you don't obtain this promise in writing, and you eventually
sue the customer, you should not be surprised if the customer asserts
that you failed to live up to the contract in some way (by raising
affirmative defenses or even a filing a counterclaim for damages
against your company), in order to buy more time, or to obtain a
result which is more to their liking, through advantageous use of
the legal system. Get the promise in writing, set out to defeat
the credibility of bogus defenses, and hopefully you will see more
of your money sooner.
5. Consider sending a survey to customers after you have
completed your work, but before payment is due.
WHY? First of all, this is good customer service.
You may want to include a business reply envelope, and perhaps even
offer a gift certificate on the customer's next purchase in exchange
for sending back a completed survey. This survey is especially useful
for first-time customers, or existing customers who suddenly purchase
a "big ticket" item. Beyond the customer service aspect,
you will learn early on if there are any perceived problems from
the customer's point of view, and you may be able to utilize a favorable
survey or even lack of a response as evidence of customer satisfaction
if a dispute occurs later.
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