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Collections today are said to be 95% psychology and 5% muscle. This article is a time tested collection of tips, techniques and thoughts that can aid you and your organization in collecting more money, faster, for less. Much of what is contained in this article may be common knowledge and the types of things you and your organization are already doing on a daily basis. But, there are bound to be several ideas and action-oriented tips that, if you implement them, will help you do an even better job on your receivables.
I: Warning Signs of Potential Credit and Collection Problems:
1. Numerous inquiries about one of your accounts.
2. Customer switches banks frequently.
3. Client asking for clarification or proof of service more frequently.
4. Changes in client payment patterns.
5. Partial payments rather than payment in full.
6. Problems in the client's geographical area.
7. Problems in the client's industry.
II: Warning Signs Your Sales Force May See First:
8. Order levels shrinking.
9. Empty shelves in warehouse or retail floor.
10. Plant operating at less than capacity.
11. Your customer's major customer is trouble.
12. Loss of key staff members.
13. Large layoffs or reductions in hours.
14. Restricted tours in areas of facility.
III:Warning Signs of Potential Bad Check Problems:
15. Checks with printed numbers under 300.
16. No preprinted name or address on the checks.
17. Starter checks with no printed information.
18. Address on check and ID don't match.
19. No picture ID or expired picture ID.
IV: Why Collection Problems Occur:
20. Fear of loss of future business (don't pursue delinquencies actively for fear of losing future business).
21. Absence of credit and collection policy or unclear policy.
22. Lack of training of the collection staff.
23. Reluctance to use outside collection sources early in delinquency cycle.
V: Seven Reasons to have a Formal Written Credit & Collection Policy:
24. Clarifies who does what.
25. Facilitates training.
26. Supports actions.
27. Prevents unauthorized changes.
28. Promotes consistency.
29. Reduces wasted time.
30. Answers 95% of the routine questions.
VI: Develop Your Credit and Collection "Skills:"
31. Two basic concepts: (1) Time is the greatest deteriorating factor on the collectability of an account, and (2) You will never have enough resources to collect all your delinquencies.
32. Implement an early referral or cure program to maximize your internal and external recoveries.
33. Early referral programs, in addition to collecting, help you identify and single out no-pays from slow-pays and treat each accordingly.
34. Accounts 60 days or less of age are over 80% collectible.
35. Accounts over 90 days of age are typically less than 50% collectible (internally).
36. Working accounts under 60 days delinquent will typically maximize your internal yield and recovery. Use a third party for those over 60-90 days delinquent while focusing internal efforts on the easier slow-pay accounts.
37. Develop and use a "60-day Pursuit Program."
Concentrate all internal efforts into the time frame where they are most profitable.
Start on your delinquents early - contact them often in the 60-day period.
Get progressively stronger as the 60 days go by.
38. Elements to use in the 60-day Pursuit Program - copies of statements/invoices, letters, sales visits, phone calls, suspend credit.
39. After 60-90 days your options are: continue to pursue internally with reduced results, write-off the account, use small claims court, attorney or outside full-service collection agency.
VII: Collection letters:
40. The most easily automated way to collect money.
41. Can't solve problems or determine if a payment problem exists.
42. One-way communication.
43. Subject to misunderstanding.
44. Collection letters maintain the dialogue with the debtor.
45. They are inexpensive.
46. Sets the stage for your next action.
47. Lets the debtor know you haven't forgotten about them.
VIII :Other Considerations in Using Collection Letters:
48. Your bill is not the debtor's only mail.
49. Your letter is competing against professional mailers.
50. Change the look of each mailing.
51. You must discourage the debtor from discarding your envelope.
52. You must encourage the debtor to open your envelope.
53. Increase the odds of positive results from your letter.
54. Hand address a blank envelope - they'll open it up!
55. Add "Address Correction Requested" and "ForwardingPostage Guaranteed" to the envelope.
56. Mark envelope to encourage opening: "Urgent," "Personal," "Confidential," "Do Not Fold," "Personal & Confidential."
57. Motivate the debtor to want to pay with appeals in your letters:
"Save finance charges."
"Keep your good credit record."
"Remain a valued client."
"Avoid a bad debt record."
"Avoid outside collection agency placement."
58. Make collection letters progressively stronger.
IX: Telephone Collection Calls.
59. Telephone contact is more costly, but much more effective.
60. Calls should supplement letters and follow up on what was said in the letters.
61. Being two-way communication, calls can identify and solve problems.
62. Sell and keep control on the collection call.
X: Making the Collection Call:
63. The collection call format:
Identify the debtor.
Identify yourself.
Demand payment in full.
Psychological pause.
Determine problem or objection.
Find solution.
Close the call and 1960 Topps baseball cards commitment.
64. Collection calls have three phases:
1. Opening Phase.
2. Negotiation Phase.
3. Closing Phase.
Opening Phase Tactics:
65. Verify the debtor's identity. (I'm calling for [name]...is this he/she?)
66. Verify debtor's address.
67. Identify yourself.
68. State the debt owed (You owe us $567.35...).
69. State the type of action you desire. ("I need payment in full today.")
70. Pause and let the debtor respond.
Negotiation Phase All-Star Comics Steps (in this order):
71. Step one: "I must have payment in full today."
72. Step two: "When can you send payment in full?"
73. Step three: "How much can you send today?"
74. Step four: "When can I expect a payment?"
Closing Phase Tactics:
75. Collector recaps what is going to happen and when.
76. Payments are always expressed as dollar amounts.
77. Points in time are always expressed as dates.
78. Debtors must confirm that they understand the next action on their part.
XI: Selecting an Outside Agency:
79. Always use a full-service agency as opposed to letter-writing services etc.
80. Look for agencies that report accounts to all three major credit reporting bureaus.
81. Select an agency that works on a national basis rather than a "local" or "regional" basis so that debtors will be pursued even if they move out of your local area.
82. Utilize an agency that has optional litigation services available if a lawsuit becomes necessary.
XII: Twenty More Tips - Especially for Medical Practices:
83. Conduct new patient pre-registration (and credit analysis) by phone or mail in advance of the first office visit. This reduces bottlenecks in the office and gives time for a credit investigation.
84. Secure credit bureau reports on new patients with poor credit history - identify and solve payment problems before services are rendered.
85. Potential "danger signals" on new patient registration forms:
Address - transient or a P.O. Box only.
Telephone - none or unlisted.
Business address/telephone - none or same as home.
Occupation - none.
Referral - none, "a friend," "medical society," or "yellow pages."
Marital Status - divorced or separated, young, single persons.
Age - very young or very old.
No insurance coverage.
86. Doctor hopping (if known).
87. "What bills do you have that are more important than your health?"
88. Collection ratio - 92% to 95% recovery is average to good for most types of group practices.
XIII: Special Medical Collection Call Debtor Appeals:
89. "I'd guess you Superboy several thousand dollars during the last few months, yet we have received only one small payment."
90. "We helped you in a time of need, and in good faith, we expected to be paid in a reasonable time."
91. "I know that you want to protect your credit so you can feel comfortable should you or your family need to return."
92. "Add to a current loan (to pay us off)...or let some other bills go as you have ours for the past few months."
Know the Law...Debt Collection, Collection Agencies and Credit Reporting Bureaus are highly regulated. Complete copies of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) and a specimen HIPAA approved agreement for healthcare providers are available at: ncsplus.com/regulations
That's 101 Credit and Collection Tips and Techniques that, when implemented effectively, can dramatically improve your cash flow and translate into improved Monster Old Maid for your business.
Bob Blackburn is the Founder of Cash Recovery Network href="cashrecoverynetwork.com">cashrecoverynetwork.com powered by NCSPlus Inc. an AR Management and Collections firm. He has recruited, trained and coached over 1000 salespeople in three different industries. He is a straight-forward no nonsense former United States Marine, and is a strong believer in Enter-Trainment!His writing is conversational and designed to challenge business people to think differently.