I have been through the range of small clients and large and now I charge rates that mostly discourage smaller companies. As others have said, there is a difference between getting your money late and not getting it all. Small clients are more likely to default and since I have culled them I almost never have recourse to debt collection services.
This is how I handle it:
1. Have your Terms and Conditions of Trade well sorted. Get this written by your lawyer and arrange it with a nominated debt collection agency. Usually you will find that you can only claim collection charges when they comply with local statutes. Often you can only charge late interest if it is already stated clearly in your Terms and Conditions, and to do otherwise may be in breach of contract laws.
2. When an invoice gets to 30 days I send a friendly reminder notice that states the invoice number, date and amount.
3. 10 days later I send another that also mentions the last letter.
4. 20 days I send another, as above.
5. At 30 days past due I send final notice that warns that if the account is not paid within 7 days the account will be passed on to the nominated collection agency. This is followed a couple of days later with a phone call to the accounts payable department. That usually gets action quickly.
6. Encourage payment by direct credit into your account to minimise delays in processing and extra deposit charges.
7. Send monthly statements of account.
For small clients I usually charge cash up front, before the job is commenced.
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
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