You Only Have Three Choices When A Customer Won't Pay.

Business News – No matter what measures you take to try and weed out potential non-paying customers, sooner or later one or more accounts are likely to become past due. When you find yourself with a past due account on your hands, the worst thing you can do is ignore the problem. The more time that passes between the payment due date and the time that the customer is contacted, the less likely you are to receive the full payment. After 6 months, you statistically collect only 50% of the amount due and after a year that amount drops to only 25% of the original debt. If you’re serious about making a profit, there are three ways to handle collection on past debt; in house efforts, hiring a collection agency, or taking legal action.

Collecting the debt yourself: If the debt is relatively fresh or small, you will most likely start by trying to collect the debt yourself before hiring a collection agency or a lawyer. The most effective way to start the process of collecting an outstanding debt is by calling the debtor. Be firm, yet polite when you call. Make sure to keep records of the time, date, and resolution of the phone call. You’ll want this information later should you decide to hire a collection agency or a lawyer.

Many past due customers can talk a great talk on the phone, but then never deliver. If you get the “I have the check right here and will send it in the mail” line from a business customer more than once, tell them you’ll send a courier service or someone from your office over to pick it up. If the business is local, try making an appointment with their finance manager to talk face to face.

Another effective way to motivate customers to make a payment is with a 10 day demand letter. Some collection agencies offer a free 10 day demand letter service that includes postage and mailing of a demand letter sent on official collection agency letterhead. Many times, this is enough to get your customer to part with their payment.

Hire a Collection Agency: Many small businesses don’t initially think of hiring a collection agency to collect an unpaid debt, but of the outsourced solutions, a collection agency is usually the most cost effective and gets the best results. When you consider the in-house time spent trying to keep on top of delinquent customers, a collection agency is often more cost effective than trying to handle it with your own staff.

With a collection agency, you don’t pay until they collect the debt, meaning that the collection agency is highly motivated to find a way to get the customer to pay. Because they don’t get paid unless you do, a collection agency tends to work fast, They also “work at odd hours”, and use all of it’s professional resources to locate missing debtors.

Today’s breed of debt collectors no longer use scare tactics or bully customers. That type of behavior has been outdated since the 70′s. Besides, not all customers who are behind on payments are deadbeats. It’s never wise in business to make enemies and gain a reputation as a brute force knee breaker for any customer who has a tough month. When you choose a debt collection agency, make sure one of its goals is to maintain extreme professionalism.

Taking legal action: Another option to collecting a debt is to take legal action whether by taking the debtor to small claims court or by hiring a lawyer to pursue the debtor. Very expensive.

The Debt Collection Industry Today

Business News – The collections industry has grown by massive proportions in the last couple of years. The reason for this is that recoveries and collections are generally outsourced business functions. It would be unfathomable for a creditor to handle retrieving debt from all of their accounts, so the creditors call the debt collection companies.

But there seems to be a beginning of an enormous change taking place with the collections industry. The industry has grown to massive proportionas through the recession and seems giant. Rather than hire out more service providers, creditors are begining to lower the number of debt collection companies that they will work with, which requires the companies they originally hired to take on more accounts.The effects of this could change the way that the collections industry operates in a large way.

As the least effective workers are removed from these collection networks, certain debt collection agencies are going to suffer losses from their most important clients. Additionally, creditors will have less reason to work with companies that have a reputation for being unethical. The financial effects of this will cause these agencies to suffer, and company value will also fall with some owners that are forced to sell their companies in distress.

As this occurs, the strongest performers will begin to see a vast amount of potential job growth, less competition, greater leverage on contract terms, improved profitability and better revenues.

Inside the debt buying market, a similar type of transference is taking place also. Instead of calling on more debt buyers, some creditors are lowering the number of companies they ask about when selling the accounts.

Smaller, less efficient debt buyers will begin to a smaller chance to buy from these issuers. Again, concentration within the primary debt sales market will increase. Recovery executives within credit businesses will be making the same kind of choice more and more, picking concentration within their vendor networks over diversification.