Have you ever refused a job or an order because your business didnt have enough
capital to purchase the supplies or hire the extra staff? You build a good reputation,
have good workers and then when you finally get a nice big contract, you have to
turn it down because all your money is tied up in accounts receivables. You know
the bills will be paid, but they arent due quite yet so you are the one who suffers
because of cash flow problems.
If you have customers who are established, are good credit risks and almost always
pay on time, you can sell those invoices to an investor (a factor). The factor will give
you an advance of 70% to 90% when the invoice is issued and will wait for the bill to
be paid. Then you will get the rest of the money minus a small fee of 1% to 5%. The
advance and fee depend on monthly volume, size of invoice, credit, time it takes to
be paid and other things.
Some business people who call me are under the impression that the advance of
70% to 90% is all they get. They are thrilled when they discover they get the rest
when the bill is paid except for the small fee. So they actually get 95% to 99% of
their invoice.
Factoring isnt a loan, it isnt a credit line, you dont have debts to pay back, you
dont tie up any assets other than the invoices, it only takes a few days to get
approved and you keep complete control of your company.
Almost any business can use factoring, so long as they have invoices that are issued
to another business. Even a business in Chapter 11 can have their receivables
factored. Different factors have different requirements, minimums, maximums, fees,
rates and applications to fill out. Some have a small application fee, many do not.
There are factors who work with any industry except construction and medical.
There are others who specialize in construction contractors and others in medical
receivables. These two have specific rules and regulations and risks and you
definitely want a factor who specializes in them.
A good broker will be working with several factors and should be able to find the
best factoring company for you. The broker will work for you, will get your
questions answered and will be able to go to a second factor if the first one doesnt
fit your needs. The broker gets paid directly by the factor and your rates and fees
are not affected.
Quite often business people think of using a factor as a last resort when their
business is struggling and they are trying to survive. In reality, businesses should
consider a factor when they are starting out, so they can keep their business
growing. They should definitely use a factor when they are feeling confident about
their business and are ready for growth.
The businesses you do the work for simply have a different address to send the
payment to; they still do the work for you, get the invoice from you and have the
same payment terms as they always do.
Just think how your business could grow if you were paid most of each invoice when
you issue it: you could get discounts when you buy your supplies if you pay cash,
you could do more marketing, hire more staff, buy more equipment, increase your
own credit rating. Instead of focusing on collecting the payments you could
concentrate on going after more contracts.
Then next time a customer calls you with a big contract, you just have to get the
papers signed and get on with the work. Sounds good, doesnt it?
Donna Poisl is President of Creative Funding Solutions. CFS works closely with
several of the best factors in the country, each with different rates, fees and
requirements and is able to find the best one for each client. Contact Donna at
http://www.solvecashflowproblems-factoring.com or by dpauthor@earthlink.net">Email