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                      When
                              to Place an Account for Collection 
                            
                              © Credit Services
                              Corporation 
                         
 
                      Collection agencies do a great job of describing why trade creditors should entrust your delinquent and uncooperative accounts to them. There do not seem to be any universally applied rules about when and why to place an account for collection. There are no hard and fast rules about when to turn an account over to a collection agency. However, Credit Managers should seriously consider doing so when the following conditions exist alone, or in combination: 
                      
                        - A customer has bounced checks to you or other
                          vendors
 
                        - The customer refuses to replace the bounced
                          check
 
                        - The creditor is no longer making progress toward clearing the unpaid
                          balance
 
                        - If the customer will not take your calls
 
                        - The customer will not return your
                          calls
 
                        - The account is 90 days or more past due
 
                        - Federal or state tax liens have recently been placed on the debtor
                          company
 
                        - There is significant employee turnover in the company, especially among senior
                          employees
 
                        - The customer has broken two or more commitments to pay the past due
                          balance
 
                        - The customer promises to pay one amount, but pays significantly
                          less
 
                        - The debtor refuses to acknowledge the balance due in
                          writing
 
                        - The customer proposes a payment plan, but refuses to sign a Promissory Note
 
                        - The debtor is considering filing for bankruptcy
                          protection
 
                        - The customer is changing
                          banks
 
                        - The debtor is in violation of its bank loan
                          covenants
 
                        - The delinquent customer cannot pay until arrangements with a new bank are
                          settled
 
                        - The bank has frozen the customer's
                          account
 
                        - The debtor issues a check placed on a
                          closed
 
                        - The company was recently
                          sold
 
                        - There was a bulk sale of
                          assets
 
                        - The customer has proposed a payment plan to trade creditors as an alternative to a bankruptcy
                          filing
 
                        - A
                          customer asks you to speak with their "work-out" specialist
 
                        - When you threaten to place the customer for collection, and they seem
                          unconcerned
 
                        - The customer's phone is
                          disconnected
 
                        - Your mail is returned
 
                        - When there has been an ownership
                          change
 
                        - The new owner claims not to be responsible for the debts of the former
                          owner(s)
 
                        - If you cannot reach a decision
                          maker
 
                        - You cannot get a reasonable commitment for payment from the decision
                          maker
 
                        - You learn the customer is being sued by other trade
                          creditors
 
                        - The account has been placed for collection by other trade creditors
 
                        - The business is for sale
 
                        - If you are told the business is for
                          sale
 
                        - You are offered payment only after the sale is
                          completed
 
                        - Creditors that once sold the customer on open-account terms now sell on COD
                          terms
 
                        - There is significant deterioration in payments to
                          creditors
 
                        - The debtor company does not respond to a final demand for
                          payment
 
                       
                        
  The more of these facts apply, the more likely that it is time to place the
      customer for collection. Any unnecessary delay in placing an account for
      collection can reduce the likelihood of recovery.  
                      
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