- Original Poster
- #1
While I have run my small business for some time, I'm starting to see problems that I have never had before. My work is almost exclusively producing Expert Reports for use in Court (if required) for solicitors. In the last 18 months I have started to see significant drag on payments - such that for the first time I have had to take out a business overdraft (I run the company to pay dividends, not to keep sucking director's loans out of me) and this year I have had about half my annual income outstanding. I'm still small enough to bob under the VAT threshold.
I have robust terms and conditions that I review at least annually. I tell them my terms are 30 days. They all accept these and send back an acknowledgement that they have done so. However, (with a few honourable exceptions) they then ignore that. I have a debt recovery policy which should kick in. BUT. I'm dealing with a relatively small number of institutions, and I want repeat business. I'm really reluctant to start charging overdue fees, and then proceeding to debt recovery, although I have done that a couple of times with variable success. I don't want word to spread in their community that I'm difficult and aggressive about being paid - in my eyes I'm not; I gave them Ts&Cs which include payment terms and they signed up to them. But cashflow is a real issue.
I found this forum after googling about credit, and realise that there are a lot of people here who have dealt with these problems and can help. I read the articles about steps people might take, most of which I already do, and am beginning to think I should start demanding deposits. Things came to a head this week with a national firm who, if I hadn't been paid by Friday would have had the 14 day letter and my 8% fee and compensation letter. The invoice was actually due in early August. However, I then did a bit of due diligence on the firm, and I discovered that they were running a massive annual loss from the documents at Companies House. I won't name them, obviously but it doesn't look sustainable to me.
However, a few general questions come out of this to me.
Is everyone seeing late payments worsen?
Should I be credit checking everyone and feeding that into my decision about working with them?
Can anyone recommend a decent inexpensive credit checker?
Should I now be demanding a deposit, and how is this likely to be received?
Any other advice would be welcomed.
I have robust terms and conditions that I review at least annually. I tell them my terms are 30 days. They all accept these and send back an acknowledgement that they have done so. However, (with a few honourable exceptions) they then ignore that. I have a debt recovery policy which should kick in. BUT. I'm dealing with a relatively small number of institutions, and I want repeat business. I'm really reluctant to start charging overdue fees, and then proceeding to debt recovery, although I have done that a couple of times with variable success. I don't want word to spread in their community that I'm difficult and aggressive about being paid - in my eyes I'm not; I gave them Ts&Cs which include payment terms and they signed up to them. But cashflow is a real issue.
I found this forum after googling about credit, and realise that there are a lot of people here who have dealt with these problems and can help. I read the articles about steps people might take, most of which I already do, and am beginning to think I should start demanding deposits. Things came to a head this week with a national firm who, if I hadn't been paid by Friday would have had the 14 day letter and my 8% fee and compensation letter. The invoice was actually due in early August. However, I then did a bit of due diligence on the firm, and I discovered that they were running a massive annual loss from the documents at Companies House. I won't name them, obviously but it doesn't look sustainable to me.
However, a few general questions come out of this to me.
Is everyone seeing late payments worsen?
Should I be credit checking everyone and feeding that into my decision about working with them?
Can anyone recommend a decent inexpensive credit checker?
Should I now be demanding a deposit, and how is this likely to be received?
Any other advice would be welcomed.