If you want to encourage your debtors to pay you promptly, offer an early payment discount rather than charging interest on late payments.
This is one way to get clients to pay when you really need them to pay. In October one year, one of our Sydney clients, John Smith, contacted me. He was in trouble. He had a very successful coffee bean importing business. Only a few customers. About 25. But ... each customer spent between $15,000 to over $100,000 with him. Every month!! John’s business turned over around 10–15 Million Dollars a year. The debt we’re talking about here was $90,000.
The trouble was, ABC was a very valuable customer. At $90,000 a month, or over one million dollars each year from this customer alone, John naturally didn’t want to upset them but he did want to, no, he had to get this customer to pay up very quickly. He had to, because his supplier, an overseas company, insisted that their bill to John was paid on time. If not, they’d simply cut off his supply. (John’s monthly bill from them at this time was around one million dollars)
•ABC was an international company and didn’t have to buy the raw coffee beans from John. They could get them elsewhere if John became ‘heavy’ with them when chasing his monthly account up for payment.
•The Accounts Payable person, Mary, at ABC wasn’t really concerned about paying John promptly – she had a “do what I can, when I can and if I feel like it” attitude.
•John simply didn’t believe her. (On previous occasions when ABC had been late, John had to almost beg Mary to pay his account so that he could meet his own, much larger, monthly commitment. She had paid each time before, just in time, but was now becoming impervious to his pleas.)
•When John called me, his thoughts were to phone Mary and start begging again. If that didn’t work, to phone ABC’s owner. But he knew that he wouldn’t be comfortable speaking to the owner as the owner wasn’t an easy guy to talk to. He just wasn’t a very approachable guy. It’d probably develop into an argument. After all, John was genuinely upset that he was in this position. It wasn’t his fault. And besides that, John didn’t feel that ‘begging’ was the right way to go about it. It wasn’t. So I’ll tell you what we did do in a moment.
•The truth is, John didn’t really know what to do. It was a Thursday and he had to have the money - the full $90,000 by Tuesday morning. He was desperate.
Most people in this situation believe that a show of strength is the only option to take. A "heavy", don’t you mess with me phone call to someone or
•a threatening letter from the boss,
•a Debt Collection Company or
•a Lawyer.
A personal visit wasn’t an option in this case (with ABC being in Melbourne and John in Sydney) and, anyway, that’d be a very confrontational approach. It would be out of the ordinary and, as such, embarrassing for all around.
So … what would YOU do?
Think about it for a moment.
Once you know what you would do, read on.
We got John to go for the “Can you help me” approach. He wrote to the Owner of ABC. An email. A letter would take too long and a fax would be too ‘open’ for such a sensitive matter. (Anyone in ABC’s office might be able to read it – not desirable).
This is the email that was sent on Thursday afternoon.
It collected the $90,000 in 3 days!!
I can't believe my luck. A little dubiously I tried the recommended email to a valuable client that is a late payer. The next day I was paid with a return email thanking me for my patience. I am still smiling.
We're smiling too, Annette. What a great outcome!
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