The accumulation of bad debt is a massive hindrance for businesses that rely on consistent cash flow in their accounts receivable. Piling bad debt reduces your company’s expected revenue and limits your ability to reinvest liquidity into business operations. It reduces your working capital, balloons administrative and operating costs and ties up resources and personnel that can be put to better use in more strategic areas. When unchecked financial challenges compound, businesses find themselves trapped in an increasingly destructive cycle—welcome to...
The Bad Debt Spiral.
In a recent survey report by Atradius, respondents asserted that bad debt accounted for 8% of all their B2B invoices, with a further 50% being past due. The inherent risk of default in businesses extending credit makes bad debt accumulation more than a cursory concern, it is a challenge that can strike at the heart of your operations.
If left unchecked, bad debt eats into your revenue, making a substantial impact on everything from your cash flow to future credit approvals. When steps are not taken to root out its underlying causes, credit managers may begin to approve new credit applications more sparingly. While this measure can improve DSO in the short term, it can also hurt your company’s long-term growth, customer relationships and future cash flow.
This is part one of a two-part series. This article will cover the intricacies of segmenting customers by risk of default and the subsequent communication strategies to be employed with each segment. It will also include an example of how customers can be divided into risk segments.
Your collections efforts and communication strategies will be most effective in reducing bad debt when they are guided by a risk-based segmentation of accounts, allowing you to prioritize outreach and tailor strategies to customers based on the likelihood of them not fulfilling obligations.
Account Risk Determination
Creating a risk-scoring system is a ubiquitous practice for AR departments. However, they can differ considerably across companies due to industry, customer relationships, scale of operations, and many other factors.
An optimal risk scoring system for an individual account consists of the following factors:
Combined, these metrics provide a comprehensive overview of a customer's present and historical relationship with your business. They are also an additional source of variance across different AR departments. Some departments consider the length of a business relationship to be of extreme importance when determining risk, others may consider it only as a peripheral factor. How a business weighs its risk scoring system depends on its individual circumstances and observed client behavior.
Despite these differences, when a common warning sign appears, it is important to recognize it for what it is, trusting your scoring system rather than justifying it with your own judgement. For example, when a long-term customer’s balance goes past due for the first time, a credit manager may be reluctant to take any corrective action because of their long-standing relationship and past performance. Using a scoring model grounded in data and policy-driven criteria is important for objective and consistent decision-making.
Risk Segmentation Model
With a standardized risk scoring system in place, the next step is to understand the results delivered and the differences between accounts that pose a high risk of default and those that pose a low risk.
Now that you can separate customers into risk-based segments, communication strategies can be employed that balance potential risk with your available resources, allowing your department to better prioritize its efforts to prevent a bad debt spiral.
Stop the Bad Debt Spiral
Customer risk segmentation is only the first step to tackling the bad debt cycle, to learn more about the strategies to employ, read Part 2 “Past Due to Bad Debt: The Strategies You Need to End the Cycle of Losses”