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What are all the factors you will take into consideration while formulating a credit policy for your business ?

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Question added by VENKITARAMAN KRISHNA MOORTHY VRINDAVAN , Project Execution Manager & Accounts Manager , ALI INTERNATIONAL TRADING EST.
Date Posted: 2014/09/24
Zaid khalaf
by Zaid khalaf , Account Excutive , Radio Rotana - AL Kawn For Advertising Company

In a brief ,

You can formulate a credit policy for your business by keep on touch with your clients and show them that you are interested on them and you want to help them not only you are there with them when you want to sell them

That means lot for the client and he will see in you that you are not taking money from him and by giving him advices and keep him updated to the latest promotions or offers will make him stay with you for ever and that for sure will come by making him trust you and to be honest with him even if he was wrong then he will make sure that is you is the only and preferably source to buy from    

zafar abbas minhas
by zafar abbas minhas , Freelance Writer , DAILY MASHRAQ

agreed with mr. vinod...........

Vinod Jetley
by Vinod Jetley , Assistant General Manager , State Bank of India

Offering Trade Credit

1. Get a Handle on the Basics

Credit policy should be tied to your sales strategy, says Doug Swafford -- more aggressive goals demand a looser spigot. Whatever your goals, the particulars will need to at least match the standards that prevail in your market for your business to be competitive.

Set the terms of sale. Two kinds of credit predominate in the business-to-business world. Open credit requires no down payment and levies no interest or carrying charges. The payment is simply due in full on the specified date, typically30 days after the goods are delivered (widely denoted as "Net30" on an invoice). Revolving credit, on the other hand, sets a limit on how much a customer can borrow. The customer pays interest only on the principal actually borrowed; as the debt is repaid, the credit available increases. (Credit cards are the most common example of revolving credit.)

These basics are among the "terms of sale" stipulated in a purchasing contract. In addition, the terms typically include discounts for early payment; a common incentive reduces the bill by2 percent for full payment within10 days. (In a30-day cycle, this is denoted as "2%10, Net30.") Or you may demand a penalty or interest payment when a due date is missed.

Establish other conditions. You will also want to stipulate other aspects of the transaction, such as delivery obligations or remedies if a customer fails to pay the debt. Conditions typically include the right to pass on legal fees and collection costs to the customer, as well as the right to establish the venue and jurisdiction for legal action. Requiring the customer to inspect merchandise upon delivery and make objections promptly also strengthens your hand should the account go bad.

Commit your policies to writing. This offers some protection against lawsuits. Federal law prohibits manipulating credit terms as a means of indirect price discrimination. That said, "You're on safe ground in treating customers differently in credit terms if you're judging them by creditworthiness," says attorney Bruce McDiarmid, a partner with Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman in San Francisco. Courts, he says, rarely second-guess credit decisions made in good faith.

2. Create Guidelines for Granting Credit

The amount of credit you grant -- and who gets it -- reflects your tolerance for risk. Why take any risk at all, especially now? Because doing so may increase your market share or win customers that will eventually bring you more business. And if the profit margin is high enough, you might come out ahead even if the customer later defaults. Swafford recalls one high-risk customer who defaulted eight or10 months after being approved. "But in that time, my profits were something like10 times the loss," he says.

Check the customer's history. Federal law obliges you to judge all applicants against the same standards, but you need not always go to the same length to verify creditworthiness. A small company, says Kobre, can rely on the CEO's judgment. As more buyers apply for credit, it's a good idea to standardize your evaluations.

The easiest way to check a customer's creditworthiness is to call two or three of its other trade creditors -- ideally in your industry -- and ask how promptly the customer pays. Ask the customer's banker if the company's lines of credit are in good standing. (You will get permission for this in the credit application; see "Craft a Credit Application," last page.) Then look at credit reports and scores. If you are talking about a very large credit limit, require financial statements and written bank and trade references.

If you deny credit, the law requires you to give an explanation if asked. "Point to objective data you used to evaluate the credit risk," says Scott Blakeley, a Los Angeles attorney who specializes in creditors' rights.

Ease into the relationship. A new customer should pay up front or on delivery. When you grant credit, keep the limit low initially and monitor the transactions in the first year. "If the customer is purchasing on a regular basis and makes timely payments," says Sorkness, "its credit limit should be increased in graduated increments."

3. Manage the Books

The key metric in managing accounts receivable is how long, on average, it takes your customers to pay their bills. In general, be concerned if your average collection period is a third longer than the period established in your credit terms (40 days for a30-day period). For a quick snapshot of the average collection period (also called days sales outstanding), divide outstanding accounts receivable by average daily credit sales. This does not account for fluctuations over time, and there are more precise (and complicated) calculations for average collection period, but it is a good rule of thumb.

Seller beware. It's also crucial to zero in on individual customers. "All credit activities should be tracked regularly: purchase patterns, average days to pay, and a change in the payment pattern," says Kobre. "Early intervention can pay big rewards in either limiting exposure or getting paid sooner." Your sales and marketing teams have an important role here, he adds. Not only may they be more likely to spot and resolve problems early, but a strong relationship with the customer may smooth the intervention. Play it safe by updating and reviewing credit files for all accounts at least semiannually. If you require financial statements, get new ones every two years.

Collection calls. In the case of delinquency, be prompt and persistent. "If follow-up contacts are not timely, it sends the message that customers need not have a sense of urgency," says Swafford. Your written policy should specify contact at regular intervals, starting with a reminder five to seven days after the due date. Further notice should escalate: A second written reminder might be followed by a phone call, followed by a final notice from a lawyer. If you still haven't been paid30 days after the due date, it's probably time to turn the matter over to a lawyer or a collection agency.

Craft a Credit ApplicationA credit application doesn't need to be long, but it should be carefully worded -- it is, after all, a legal contract.

Be sure the customer provides the company's legal name and entity type, as well as the names of principals. If the business structure shields the company's owners from liability, you may want to extract a personal guarantee.

Ask for the contact info -- telephone and fax numbers and e-mail and home addresses -- for the principals, as well as for the person who will probably be your main contact: the accounts payable manager.

Ask for trade references, ideally in your industry, who can speak to completed transactions with the prospect.

Seek bank account information and contacts. Some lawyers recommend including a form that authorizes a bank to release the customer's records.

Include the terms and conditions, written so that the customer has to acknowledge agreeing to them -- and require a dated signature.

Evaluating Creditworthiness

What to look for in a prospective borrower's balance sheet? Doug Swafford, who has spent more than three decades managing lines of credit, likes to keep it simple.

The bottom line: Is the company profitable?

The cash-flow statement: Is cash flow positive -- i.e., is the business taking in more than it is spending?

The receivables and payables balancing test: Calculate average collection and payment periods by comparing accounts receivable with operating revenue and accounts payable with costs. (This is all on the income statement.) Make sure the company's average collection period is roughly equal to its terms. Then, determine how fast the company pays its bills. "If its accounts receivable are turning over every45 days, and it's paying bills in50 or55 days, then it has to wait to get paid before it pays you," Swafford says.

 

Divyesh Patel
by Divyesh Patel , Assistant Professional Officer- Treasury , City Of Cape Town

  1. Credit limits

  2. Credit terms

  3. Documentation

  4. Customer information

  5. Credit cards and personal checks

 

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