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Casual Articles - Credit Management: Design a System and Work the System
Customer Service in Auto Services is NOT Offending Women Customers Four: Visit customers who don’t pay and who don’t live up to their commitments. Find out what is preventing the past-due customer from paying. If the payment is in dispute, find out what sort of concession the customer wants before he is willing to pay up. In collections like in life, it’s the squeaking wheel that often gets the grease. Past-due customers must realize that collecting your accounts receivable is a top priority for you.In the auto services industry there are generally more women customers than men. This is because men will typically do some of the auto services and preventive maintenance on their car themselves, whereas women customers will have someone else like an auto shop do the services for them.Even women who have men around the house will sometimes have a man take their car to the auto service shop for them. Still, even with that there are still more women customers by about 15% more.Needless to say customer service in the auto services industry is about pleasing your women customers and when they fill out reader service cards or customer service surveys you need to listen to what they say.Women c Step Five: If you have not already cut accounts off who have not given you a satisfactory response, do so immediately and turn the account over to a third party fo Employee Retention: The 9 Key Strategies To Keeping Your Most Talented People How well does your company do at collecting past due accounts? The answer will vary widely depending on your discipline, your tenacity and perhaps even your region of the country.Many people assume that people leave jobs largely for financial reasons - but that simply is not the case.Extensive research into employee retention shows that people leave jobs for a combination of factors. Factors which may include limited opportunities to develop, being in the wrong job, not feeling valued, that the job no longer fits their lifestyle or indeed a sense that they no longer trust and have faith in their employers.So, to retain your most talented people, you require a strategy that seeks to limit these factors.:1. Recruit the right people in the right wayIf you have hired the wrong person, then you are always going to struggle to keep them. You may have hired someone w Fortunately, few regions of the country use credit as a tool for any other purpose than customer convenience. However, some regions do use credit as a marketing tool. And in others, sometimes dozens of years ago, companies began to allow customers to use them like most professional customers use a bank. And a long history of practices like these are always difficult to eliminate. Among the ways credit management is generally measured: • Average accounts receivable collection days. • Bad debt expense as a percentage of sales. • Recoveries as a percentage of outstanding balances. • Turn around time for processing credit applications. • Service charges collected. We have good statistics on average collection days, which in the most ideal circumstances run from the high 30s to mid 40s. And many well managed firms are able to hold bad debt expense to under ?% of charge sales. What is your system in your company? Consistency in following a system is essential to achieving optimal results. One owner I met recently, has reduced his collection days to the low 30-day range by mailing an invoice to his customers immediately following each delivery. This is somewhat of an unusual system, but it is innovative and it works for him. He says that he is surprised at how many customers pay their invoices upon receipt. The following is one system that works for many dealers: Step One: Assign accountability to one person in your business for collections and establish measurable standards for this individual to achieve. Step Two: The credit manager should place a phone call to customers whose checks have not been received three to four days following the due date and find out when they intend to pay. Meticulous notes should be taken to remind the credit manager what was promised so these notes can be referred to if follow up phone calls are necessary. Step Three: Using customer contact software, a calendar box or some other type of follow up system, call the customers who have not done what they promised to do. Past-due customers must know that they cannot get away with merely stalling or holding up payment, so consistent follow up is critical. Step Four: Visit customers who don’t pay and who don’t live up to their commitments. Find out what is preventing the past-due customer from paying. If the payment is in dispute, find out what sort of concession the customer wants before he is willing to pay up. In collections like in life, it’s the squeaking wheel that often gets the grease. Past-due customers must realize that collecting your accounts receivable is a top priority for you. Step Five: If you have not already cut accounts off who have not given you a satisfactory response, do so immediately and turn the account over to a third party for Supplier Sees 53% Reduction in Out-of-Spec Orders Case Study s generally measured:The goal of perfection is a challenge. It is often viewed as an expensive process requiring large investments. Yet one company has realized a 53% reduction in orders that have to be set aside for additional Quality Control checks. How did they do it? They used communication techniques - not capital outlay!The secret to there success revolved around team skills and communication. The company's Production Manager formed a focus group to discuss comprised of members from each department that was affected in some way by the rejects. Using a proven "problem identification" process, the production manager was able to facilitate a brain-storming session separating symptoms from root causes. The team was qui • Average accounts receivable collection days. • Bad debt expense as a percentage of sales. • Recoveries as a percentage of outstanding balances. • Turn around time for processing credit applications. • Service charges collected. We have good statistics on average collection days, which in the most ideal circumstances run from the high 30s to mid 40s. And many well managed firms are able to hold bad debt expense to under ?% of charge sales. What is your system in your company? Consistency in following a system is essential to achieving optimal results. One owner I met recently, has reduced his collection days to the low 30-day range by mailing an invoice to his customers immediately following each delivery. This is somewhat of an unusual system, but it is innovative and it works for him. He says that he is surprised at how many customers pay their invoices upon receipt. The following is one system that works for many dealers: Step One: Assign accountability to one person in your business for collections and establish measurable standards for this individual to achieve. Step Two: The credit manager should place a phone call to customers whose checks have not been received three to four days following the due date and find out when they intend to pay. Meticulous notes should be taken to remind the credit manager what was promised so these notes can be referred to if follow up phone calls are necessary. Step Three: Using customer contact software, a calendar box or some other type of follow up system, call the customers who have not done what they promised to do. Past-due customers must know that they cannot get away with merely stalling or holding up payment, so consistent follow up is critical. Step Four: Visit customers who don’t pay and who don’t live up to their commitments. Find out what is preventing the past-due customer from paying. If the payment is in dispute, find out what sort of concession the customer wants before he is willing to pay up. In collections like in life, it’s the squeaking wheel that often gets the grease. Past-due customers must realize that collecting your accounts receivable is a top priority for you. Step Five: If you have not already cut accounts off who have not given you a satisfactory response, do so immediately and turn the account over to a third party fo Guarantees In Marketing And How You Can Use Them To Increase Your Profits - Response imal results.All too often people overlook the importance of guarantees in their marketing. Guarantees perform some basic functions in business, but they can be used far more effectively in marketing your product as well. Typically, you will see standard guarantees like “Double Your Money Back” or “100% Satisfaction Guaranteed”. These types of guarantees are common and serve the purpose of easing the prospects mind, and allowing them to move forward with their purchase.While these guarantees are useful you can use them in much better ways. First, I would recommend using a stronger or more unique guarantee. For instance, “If you aren’t entirely happy with everything I’ve done for you I will personally buy my produ One owner I met recently, has reduced his collection days to the low 30-day range by mailing an invoice to his customers immediately following each delivery. This is somewhat of an unusual system, but it is innovative and it works for him. He says that he is surprised at how many customers pay their invoices upon receipt. The following is one system that works for many dealers: Step One: Assign accountability to one person in your business for collections and establish measurable standards for this individual to achieve. Step Two: The credit manager should place a phone call to customers whose checks have not been received three to four days following the due date and find out when they intend to pay. Meticulous notes should be taken to remind the credit manager what was promised so these notes can be referred to if follow up phone calls are necessary. Step Three: Using customer contact software, a calendar box or some other type of follow up system, call the customers who have not done what they promised to do. Past-due customers must know that they cannot get away with merely stalling or holding up payment, so consistent follow up is critical. Step Four: Visit customers who don’t pay and who don’t live up to their commitments. Find out what is preventing the past-due customer from paying. If the payment is in dispute, find out what sort of concession the customer wants before he is willing to pay up. In collections like in life, it’s the squeaking wheel that often gets the grease. Past-due customers must realize that collecting your accounts receivable is a top priority for you. Step Five: If you have not already cut accounts off who have not given you a satisfactory response, do so immediately and turn the account over to a third party fo Paper Shredder Prices phone call to customers whose checks have not been received three to four days following the due date and find out when they intend to pay. Meticulous notes should be taken to remind the credit manager what was promised so these notes can be referred to if follow up phone calls are necessary.Today, a number of manufacturers offer high quality paper shredders to suit everyone?s budget. Depending on features and functions, the price of paper shredders varies. Paper shredders are available starting form $10. Strip cut machines are relatively less expensive than crosscut models.A countless number of dealers are there in the paper shredder business scenario to provide paper shredders of all price ranges. Destroyit, GBC, Fellowes, Dahle, MBM, and Kobra are a few among the leading brands. The price of Destroyit shredder models for low volumes starts from $180. Their D.O.D/ NSA-CSS approved shredders and industrial shredders cost more than $5,000 and $28,000 respectively. Fellowes provides paper shre Step Three: Using customer contact software, a calendar box or some other type of follow up system, call the customers who have not done what they promised to do. Past-due customers must know that they cannot get away with merely stalling or holding up payment, so consistent follow up is critical. Step Four: Visit customers who don’t pay and who don’t live up to their commitments. Find out what is preventing the past-due customer from paying. If the payment is in dispute, find out what sort of concession the customer wants before he is willing to pay up. In collections like in life, it’s the squeaking wheel that often gets the grease. Past-due customers must realize that collecting your accounts receivable is a top priority for you. Step Five: If you have not already cut accounts off who have not given you a satisfactory response, do so immediately and turn the account over to a third party fo Forensic Nursing: The New Breed Of Nurses Four: Visit customers who don’t pay and who don’t live up to their commitments. Find out what is preventing the past-due customer from paying. If the payment is in dispute, find out what sort of concession the customer wants before he is willing to pay up. In collections like in life, it’s the squeaking wheel that often gets the grease. Past-due customers must realize that collecting your accounts receivable is a top priority for you.With the continuing rise in crime rates, forensic nursing is quickly becoming a popular part of the American judicial system. Forensic nursing is one of the newest forms of forensic sciences recognized by the American Nurses Association. The new field combines the health care profession with the judicial system.Nurses trained in forensic nursing are needed to quickly and appropriately gather evidence that can be used in a court of law. Along with gathering forensic information, they also testify in trials of their jurisdictions.The appeal of forensic nursing is mainly with victims of violence. Multiple people are seeing victims, social workers, doctors, the police etc. This can be hard on the vict Step Five: If you have not already cut accounts off who have not given you a satisfactory response, do so immediately and turn the account over to a third party for collection. Do not take this step, however, without advising the customer that this is your next step. Also make sure you understand and agree with the collections tactics used by the collections firm you choose. Even though it’s a third party, your company will be identified with the outside firm’s tactics. Step Six: Insist on each past due customer paying service charges. One owner told me recently that he tells his customers this: "I have to pay for capital, so if you don't pay me on time, I have to borrow more money and pay more interest. Unless you can show me someplace I can get capital for free, you're going to have to pay me a service charge when you don't pay your account on time." The owner or GM should follow up with the credit manager on a pre-determined basis to make sure that he or she is following each step in the collections process. The key to an effective collections policy is to avoid being guilty of wishful thinking. No matter how much you hate collecting, someone in your organization must meticulously follow up according the plan you have designed. In recent years, many companies are turning over their credit function to an outside organization. One such firm is Charlotte-based Blue Tarp Financial. (www.bluetarp.com). Why would a company outsource credit? The owners I interviewed in preparation for this article shared with me some of their reasons: • We’re not a bank, yet many of our customers treat us like a bank. We’ve never been really good at credit, so we decided to turn it over to an organization that was an expert at it. We’ve not had a bad debt since. • We outsourced credit to improve our cash flow. Blue Tarp offers us the option to pay us either every 30 days or for a few additional basis points, every 15 days. This enables us to take all of our vendor cash discounts and frees up cash for other capital expenditures. • Our credit manager was freed up to perform functions she never had time to do before we outsourced credit. While she did her best, she was not a credit professional. Now I feel as if our credit is for the first time being handled by professionals. • I [outsourced credit] for selfish reasons. I operate in a relatively small town and I have a difficult time turning down a customer I grew up with. As a result, I have suffered some significant credit loses from time to time. Now, I just tell my custo
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