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How Small Businesses Avoid Financial Disaster

Article Description:
====================

Small business owners and business managers typically struggle
with collecting on accounts receivables. While many businesses
can get away with requiring payment upfront on products or
services delivered, other businesses cannot. When dealing with
corporate clients, a small businessperson must generally agree to
50% upfront and 50% on completion of the work, in order to get
the job.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

1016 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-07-31 14:24:00

Written By:     Donovan Moorhead
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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How Small Businesses Avoid Financial Disaster
Copyright (c) 2007 Donovan Moorhead
Diversified Financial Services
http://www.dfsfactoring.com



Small business owners and business managers typically struggle
with collecting on accounts receivables. While many businesses
can get away with requiring payment upfront on products or
services delivered, other businesses cannot. When dealing with
corporate clients, a small businessperson must generally agree to
50% upfront and 50% on completion of the work, in order to get
the job. Other business managers have realized that if they
offered financing to their clients, they could increase the
number of sales that they can expect to receive.

Although extending credit to a business' customers is good for
business, most small- to medium- sized businesses cannot afford
to float their customers' payments indefinitely. In other cases,
product or service suppliers do not have enough cash-on-hand at
their end to float their customers' payments for more than a
week or two.

And then there are those times when the customer who received the
credit from the supplier could not pay on time. Sometimes, those
invoices remain unpaid for more than 90 days, and the supplier
has to commit time to chase payment from the customer. If a
business has dozens of overdue invoices, the company may have to
employ one person just to ensure that invoices will get paid.
This may increase the cost of operation for the business at a
level that makes it difficult to continue doing business without
raising prices.

Not very many businesses can afford to let one or two large
clients go without paying. Non-payment of invoices could lead to
the supplier having its own financial problems, which could lead
to past due bills or in the worst-case scenario, the closing of
the supplier's business.

Planning Ahead To Prevent Financial Disasters

Most new business owners have the idea that the only way they can
acquire cash they need to float client invoices or business
growth is to go to a bank and ask for a business loan. Others
think that the next best bet is angel investors.

But, the truth is that when dealing with banks, most will not
talk to a company that has less than twelve months of operating
records. Other banks require three years of operation before they
consider giving the business a loan. And when they are willing to
consider a loan application, they generally require one-to-three
years of records to substantiate the loan.

Venture capitalists or angel investors are much the same as the
banks when it comes to proving a track record to ensure the
viability of the business. The additional downside to using the
venture capitalist or angel investor is that in most cases, the
investor requires a percentage ownership of the business and a
higher percentage rate in order to supply the money needed to
grow the business.

For Most, The Best Option Remains Unrealized

There is actually a different kind of financing out there that
few people realize exists. It is called Invoice Factoring.

Invoice factoring brings a new twist to the challenge of
financing businesses. Instead of having to go to a bank or an
investor and lay out the records of the supplier, the supplier
turns their invoices to a third-party financing company, also
called a factoring company.

The invoice factoring company analyzes the credit of applicant
business' invoiced clients. The factoring company, based on the
size of the invoice, the invoiced clients' credit and other
factors, will make a determination as to the likelihood of that
client paying the invoice and charge a factoring rate based on
this analysis.

When the supplier turns an invoice over to a factoring company,
the factoring company will pay the supplier 80%-90% of the
invoices' face value, usually within 24 hours to seven days. The
supplier will now have this money on hand for maintaining their
operations.

The factoring company will take over the role of the accounts
receivable department of the supplier. They will maintain contact
with the client and ensure that the invoice will be paid in a
timely manner.

When the client makes payment in full, then the factoring company
will extract their service fees for handling the invoice, which
is called the invoice discount rate. Once the factoring company
has received their fees, then it will send the remaining cash
received to the supplier.

Cost Benefits

Many small-, medium- and large-businesses consider the invoice
factoring company to be a vital component of their business
model.

When considering the cost of hiring people to maintain accounts
receivables and collections, the cost of the factoring service is
small in comparison to the alternative. Most factoring services
only charge a invoice discount rate of 2%-5%, depending on the
many factors that go into their analysis of an invoice.

One of the greatest benefits to the supplier is the ability to
acquire cash immediately, to keep their business running smoothly
while their customers delay payment. Two advantages are gained by
getting partial cash payment upfront. First, the supplier can
remain in good standing with its own creditors, because it is
able to make its own payments on time. Secondly, the supplier
will not have to sweat whether a customer will pay in 30-, 60-,
90- or even 180-days. Getting the customer to pay on time becomes
the responsibility of the factoring company.

If the supplier were to get a loan from a bank, the supplier
would be looking at paying an interest rate in the range of
5%-15%, based on the credit rating of the supplier. These costs
could easily exceed the cost of the factoring service in very
short order.

One Less Worry

Business owners and managers have enough to worry about already,
without having to worry about when a client will pay for services
that are rendered.

The invoice factoring company can provide a product or service
supplier with the capital they need to stay afloat, during those
rough spells. Businesses, who employ factoring companies, have a
more stable and predictable business model and tend to survive
longer than businesses that do not.

Simply put, the factoring company gives the business owner the
flexibility to do what he or she does best... grow his or her
business.




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Donovan Moorhead writes about commercial finance and business 
management. If you operate a staffing company, security guard 
services company, or any other kind of service company, you 
could very well benefit from our accounts receivable factoring 
service company. Download the FREE EBook "Growing Your Company 
Without Debt" from DFS Factoring to learn how Invoice Factoring 
may be right for your company at: http://www.dfsfactoring.com or
(800) 954-0012.


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