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                      The
                      Power Equation in Business to Business Collections 
© 2001 Michael C. Dennis 
 
                      It is important to
                      understand the power equation in business-to-business
                      collections. Failure to understand this essential element
                      of the collection process weakens the creditor's ability
                      to collect invoices as they come due. All of the following
                      statements are generally true about commercial [business
                      to business] collections:
                       
                        - Trade creditors have
                          more power than they think they have. For example, the
                          customer may need the creditors goods or services now
                          or in the future, or may want to use the company as a
                          credit reference.
                        
 - Credit managers need the
                          ability to hold orders as leverage to force reluctant
                          customers to pay immediately, or as leverage to
                          negotiate a reasonable payment plan.
                        
 - Creditors can force a
                          delinquent debtor into involuntary bankruptcy, but
                          should do so only if it would be in their best
                          interest to do so.
                        
 - If a creditor has a
                          personal or inter-corporate guarantee covering a
                          debtor's obligations, it has significant bargaining
                          power.
                        
 - A creditor is in a
                          better bargaining position if it provides a unique or
                          proprietary product. If this is the case, the credit
                          manager would be "unwise" not to use this
                          leverage to secure payment from delinquent customers.
                        
 - When a customer has the
                          creditor's merchandise and the creditor's money [in
                          the form of unpaid invoices] the customer is in a
                          relatively powerful position. Once a delinquent
                          customer has paid the balance due, the balance of
                          power shifts to the seller.
                        
 - Failing to react
                          appropriately when a customer abuses your terms of
                          sale changes the balance of power in favor of the
                          customer in the short term and the long term.
                        
 - For every inappropriate
                          action on the part of a debtor [such as breaking
                          payment commitments] there should be an equal and
                          opposite reaction by trade creditors. Failing to react
                          appropriately to abuses by customers invites even
                          greater abuse.
 
                       
                      
                      
                      
                      
                      
                        
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