Credit Corner
Collection in Person
Personal interviews are the strongest demand for payment.
The interviewer must show authority and positive ability to negotiate the
claim, if necessary. At this time, the customer must pay, show valid proof of a
dispute or be completely honest in stating their financial position.
Aids Needed on
Collection Visits
Try to get the customer to tome to your office. If it is
necessary for you to go to see them, you may need these items:
- A copy
of the customer’s ledger
- Copies
of invoices involved
- An
envelope addressed to you
- Copies
of correspondence
Basic steps in a personal interview are the same as on the
telephone. You should confirm all information on your application form
and make sure it is up to date.
Then, you should determine the problem. Once again,
it will be one of three things: a lack
of funds or a belief that there is a lack of funds, a dispute or a refusal to
pay.
If it is a refusal, you have no choice but to place the
account with your collection service. If it is a dispute, once again you can
immediately decide whether it is a bona fide dispute or an imaginary one and
take the necessary steps to resolve it.
Disputes, valid or invalid, are handled in the same manner
as in a telephone interview.
Finally, when you have found a solution, it if is not a
payment in full, put the arrangement in writing.
Salespeople as
Collectors
Using salespeople as collectors is a subject which
occasionally arises when the credit department completes its automatic procedures
and when the company policy is heavily sales oriented.
The sales management theory is that the salespeople know
their customer and, therefore, can ask them for the past-due money. The theory
may be valid, but in practice, it is not usually successful.
In fact, it may be very costly.
Consider these factors:
- The
good salesperson has been trained to sell their company’s goods and
services, and is not trained for collection work
- The
poor salesperson may have been a source of the delinquency because of
promises made in order to get the sale
- Time
spent on collection of an account may detract from time allotted for
selling
- The
credit department must set a follow-up system to watch for the salesperson’s
reports
- Adjustment
of the account should be the responsibility of a salesperson’s supervisor
in consultation with the credit department
- There
may be a 30- to 45-day additional delay before the credit department can
take more positive action
- There
may be inter-departmental resentment. The salesperson is being asked to do
a credit department job, and this should not be their responsibility
Key
Word for Collection: SPEED
In summary, there are some exceptional salespeople who can
sell and collect accounts. Usually, the combined duty is not a good policy
because of delay, cost and resentment.
Whatever the method of collection, the key word is “speed.”
The sooner contact is made with the debtor, the sooner the money will be
forthcoming or the sooner you will know that outside assistance is needed.