Bectran Blog

How to Turn Your AR Process into a Customer Retention Strategy

Written by Adam Coyner | Jul 15, 2025 2:00:00 PM

Collections is no longer a back-office task; it’s a frontline experience. 

When businesses talk about customer experiences, they typically focus on the early stages of the journey — onboarding, pricing, delivery, and support. Rarely does anyone mention accounts receivable processes. But accounts receivable, and especially collections, is one of the most emotionally charged, consistent interactions your customer has with your brand, and it’s often what they remember most. 

If that interaction comes across as impersonal, unclear, or delayed, it leaves a lasting impression — one that’s seldom voiced but deeply felt. 

 

Transparency Builds Trust, Trust Builds Loyalty

In B2B credit, transparency is more than a courtesy — it’s a competitive distinction. When customers can clearly see what they owe, when it’s due, and how payments are applied, the relationship becomes less transactional and more collaborative. You’re no longer another creditor; you’ve become a trusted partner within their operation. 

This level of openness builds long-term loyalty. Customers are far less likely to dispute charges or delay payments. Instead of chasing down past-dues, your team can invest time in high-value conversations that deepen the customer relationship. 

Think of trust as a positive feedback loop — a cycle where greater transparency in your AR operations leads to more timely payments and stronger communication with customers. That improved dialogue often results in lower DSO and higher repayment rates. As consistency improves, so too does your finance team’s visibility, making it easier to forecast, plan, and fuel growth. 

 

What AR Teams Can Learn From Sales: Make it Easy to Say Yes

Sales teams spend countless hours optimizing their buyer journey. Yet, AR teams are often stuck in reactive mode. They’re waiting for late payments, chasing down information, or sending out generic reminders. 

But what if AR took a page from the sales playbook? 

Start by reducing any potential reasons for animosity: 

  • Offer customers flexible payment options 
  • Provide early payment incentives 
  • Set up auto-reminders that feel helpful, not robotic 
  • Enable self-service through intuitive portals 
  • Track which initiatives are working and create a plan to optimize them, or adjust course when needed. 

Far from simply customer-friendly moves, these are revenue-accelerating decisions. Just like sales, AR should be measured not only by what it collects, but by how efficiently it collects. The easier you make it for customers to act, the more likely they are to follow through, without added pressure. 

 

When Confusion Creeps In, Customers Check Out

Put yourself in your customer’s position: they’ve paid off a past-due invoice and expect the order to move forward, only to find it still on hold. No confirmation, no shipment, no update. So, they follow up. First with customer service, then sales, and eventually credit. By the time the issue is resolved, the goodwill sentiment you worked hard to achieve will be gone. 

It doesn’t take much to shift the tone of a customer relationship — a delayed shipment, an invoice that arrives before the product. Over time, small lapses can lead customers to question, “Why prioritize timely payments if shipments aren’t on time?” 

Here’s what too many companies miss: nearly 70% of payment delays are caused by technical or procedural issues, not bad intent. Maybe the payment method was too clunky, or the invoice lacked the necessary context. Perhaps the customer didn’t even know they were overdue. 

Every delay, every unclear notice, and every long hold becomes a tax on trust. One that eventually gets paid, in lost revenue. 

The positive, however, is that the inverse is just as powerful. If you make paying easy, and your processes feel clear and responsive, you don’t just get paid faster — you build loyalty. 

 

Experience Extends Beyond the Sale

Most sales within day-to-day life are B2C, so it’s easy to assume that once a sale is closed, the “experience” ends. However, for B2B companies, the real test of customer satisfaction begins post-sale, and accounts receivable play a starring role. 

Consider your customers’ day-to-day experience. Are they guessing what they owe, aimlessly trying to navigate complex portals? Are there late fees acting as jump-scares popping up and surprising them? Should any of these take place, your reputation takes a hit. Those impassive touchpoints add up, even if your product is objectively great. 

Modern AR systems flip that script. Real-time updates, clear and unified dashboards, and proactive communication make the AR experience as smooth as the buying experience.  

And when your collections process is seamless, it speaks volumes about your organization. You’re not just easy to buy from — you’re now easy to work with. 

 

Consistency Customers Can Feel

All of this — real-time visibility, proactive communication, and actionable insights — hinges on automation.  

Traditional AR processes are not equipped to manage the high-volume demands that modern AR teams encounter. As a result, they create more data and communication silos, leading to errors and frustration. However, when AR is automated, every stakeholder gets a consistent, up-to-date view. That means faster resolutions, fewer disputes, and more confident decision-making — whether you’re in the credit department, the CFO’s office, or working on the customer’s accounting team. Just as importantly, it becomes easy to see exactly where something isn’t working, so teams can make targeted adjustments and continuously improve processes. 

In the name of dispelling misunderstood notions, automation does not eliminate the human element; it elevates it. Your team can now concentrate on exceptions, relationships, and high-value strategies. Leave the spreadsheets and overdue emails to a system designed to process them. 

 

Turning AR Data into Strategic Insight

Transparency isn’t just for customers — it’s for you, too. 

Modern AR platforms generate a treasure trove of data: payment patterns, aging trends, dispute frequency, cash flow velocity, and more. With the right tools, that data becomes a strategic advantage. 

Leveraged properly, these insights can identify accounts that consistently pay late, and offer adjusted terms or automated nudges. You can forecast risk across regions, segments, or even customer types. For upstream decisions, like credit limits, some platforms even have behavioral insights that integrate directly into the platform, helping AR teams be consistent and efficient. 

Insight provides AR teams with what speed alone cannot: control over what happens next. 

5 AR Practices that Build Retention — Not Just Collections

1. Flag Early, Act Early

Train your systems (and people) to detect changes before they become problems. An ever-reliable customer slips from Net 15 to Net 30? Don’t wait for day 60. Send a gentle check-in early; remain preemptive rather than reactive. 

Tactical tip: Use dashboards that highlight payment pattern changes. Build alerts that notify sales when discrepancies occur.

2. Make Order Holds Smart and Fast

The moment a customer clears their balance, your system should trigger the following steps: release the order, send confirmation, and restore momentum. 

Tactical tip: Integrate AR and ERP so that payment clears, which means holds lift in real-time. Say goodbye to manual bottlenecks. 

3. Automate With Context

Templates are helpful, and they certainly have their time and place. But they shouldn’t be lifeless. Infuse automated messages with real-time data: “Thank you, we have received your payment for invoice #1234. Your order is on its way.”   

Specificity feels personal, and it makes you feel seen. 

Tactical tip: Build automated templates that pull in respective order numbers, past payment habits, and dispute statuses. 

 4. AR Data Across Teams

AR sees a lot. Why keep helpful data in a siloed environment? If dispute volume is rising for a particular SKU, your product team be aware. If a region consistently delays payment, sales ops should see it. 

Tactical tip: Send monthly AR insights to other teams, not just finance. Make it part of a positive feedback loop. 

 5. Track Trust, Not Turnaround

While DSO does matter, it’s equally pertinent to measure AR’s impact on loyalty. Track metrics like: 

  • First-response time on disputes 
  • Median dispute resolution time 
  • Percentage of orders held and resolved within SLA targets

Tactical tip: Set clear criteria that trigger alerts when trust drops, like auto-flagging accounts with unresolved disputes over 7 days or SLA targets that miss more than 10% of the time. It’s not just a measurement; it’s a system that protects relationships. 

End of the Cycle, Start of Loyalty

For too long, accounts receivable has been seen as the final stepping stone in the customer lifecycle — a back-office necessity rather than a strategic lever. But that line of thinking is outdated. 

Modern AR is a collection function, and so much more. It’s a frontline experience, a trust-building mechanism, and a wealth of powerful insights that shape the way your business interacts with customers. 

By reducing frustration, building transparency, and utilizing automation to surface potent data at the right time, AR teams can transform from reactive collectors to proactive relationship builders. 

In an ever-adaptive market where loyalty is fragile and competitors are a click away, that shift matters. Because when your customers feel understood, respected, and supported — even when money is involved — they’re far more likely to stay. 

Retention starts where most companies stop: with AR.