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Page 1: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Ask, Share, Learn – Within the Largest Community of Corporate Finance Professionals

Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Page 2: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

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Page 3: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Ask, Share, Learn – Within the Largest Community of Corporate Finance Professionals

Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow Scott Pezza, Principal Analyst, Blue Hill Research

Page 4: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Context: Top Objectives

• Improve Cash Management

• Reduce Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)

• Reduce Time Required to Process Receivables

• Reduce Customer Inquiries

• Increase Usage of Electronic Invoicing

Sources: Blue Hill Research AR Trends Pulse Survey (2014), Institute of Financial Operations AR Automation Studies (2013, 2014))

Page 5: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Context: Top Challenges

• Impact of Customer Default or Missed/Late Payments

• Desire to Reduce or Control Labor Costs

• Customer Reluctance to Use Electronic Invoicing

• Lack of Collaboration Between Functional Areas

• Customer Attempts to Extend Payment Terms

Sources: Blue Hill Research AR Trends Pulse Survey (2014), Institute of Financial Operations AR Automation Studies (2013, 2014))

Page 6: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Credit review Sales order management

Customer billing and invoicing

Collections Dispute resolution Cash application1

2

3

4

5

3.29 3.28

3.6

3.023.22

3.61

O2C Self-Assessment

Sources: Blue Hill Research AR Trends Pulse Survey (2014)

Abili

ty t

o H

and

le (

1 =

Poor,

5 =

Very

Well)

Page 7: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

O2C Automation Profile

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

44%59%

48%61% 55% 59%

10%

27% 45%10%

0%

21%

Partially Automated Fully Automated

Page 8: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Customer Interaction: Billing & Payments

41%

59%

Outgoing Invoices

PaperElectronic

43%

57%

Incoming Payments

53%of Customer BaseAccepts eInvoices

54%of Customer BaseUses ePayments

Sources: Blue Hill Research AR Trends Pulse Survey (2014)

Page 9: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Research Wrap-Up

• Sellers want to– Improve process efficiency– Speed up customer payment

• Buyers want to– Improve process efficiency (common ground)– Extend payment terms

• Technology is currently– Addressing the “low hanging fruit” with electronic

invoicing and payment– Helping to automate (at least partially) O2C processes in

many firms

Page 10: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Working Towards Solutions

• Start with the problems: slow payments and high DSO

• Work backwards to understand the reasons:– Inefficient customer AP processes– Inaccurate information from our billing/invoicing– Customer scale and negotiating leverage– Customer financial distress

• Identify strategies to avoid or address those difficulties

When looking for answers, everything is on the table: credit, sales, billing, collections, and dispute resolution

Page 11: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

Step 1: Make Informed Sales

• Problem: Customer default or inability to pay can have a large impact on sellers

• Source: Selling to unfit buyers or not using appropriate terms to minimize repayment risk

• Solution:– Enable information exchange between credit, sales, and

collections to ensure future sales are informed by past payment performance

– While you may not want to forego a sale outright, adjust terms to (1) require full or partial payment in advance, (2) reduce the net term, (3) offer discount-based incentives for early payment, or (4) impose penalties for late payments.

Page 12: Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow

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Getting Paid: 5 Steps to Improving Collections & Cash Flow