 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
===============
Our Subscribers Say...
Credit Today's Resource Directory and their online e-mail forum (ListServ) provide information on almost any credit-related topic you can think of. It is a great way to exchange information with other credit professionals. As the saying goes, "You don't know what you don't know."
- Scott Goen,
Credit Manager, Big Lots Stores, Inc., Wholesale Division
"We've recently started using the ListServ tool within Credit Today. This is phenomenal and powerful forum for gaining immediate feedback, ideas, and suggestions, relative to any credit topic under the sun, all in a real-time e-mail format."
-Javier Vela, Senior Credit Manager, Global Credit Services, JDA Software Group Inc.
"Being a part of the Credit Today online community is like having the expertise of hundreds of credit managers at your fingertips. These credit execs are willing to help you solve topical business issues as they arise. In the current environment of ever increasing competing priorities which reduce our opportunities to meet peers out of the office face-to-face, this is the most valuable tool you can have on your desktop! It's important that we have a mechanism to reach out to our counterparts quickly to exchange knowledge as well as to stay on top of industry trends."
- Victoria Artis, Director of Customer Financial Services, Pfizer, Inc.
"Over the last 10 years I've seen Credit Today evolve from a monthly credit publication into a quality source of information and guidance for the B2B credit community. The website, with its user friendly form downloads, will take you from examples of new account credit applications to bankruptcy forms and everything in between.
The Credit Today ListServ has become the pre-imminent online forum, providing an opportunity for discussion and comments (and occasional humor) from an impressive list of credit professionals."
David Dungan, Director of Credit
Justin Brands, Inc. (A Berkshire Hathaway company)
Fort Worth, Texas
"There are numerous credit periodicals available to the credit professional today. How good is Credit Today? Is it relevant? I always have to read it late, or online because my credit analysts want to read it the minute it comes in. When my staff wants to read a publication before I have a chance to read it then something is working in that publication. We have cancelled our other subscriptions. When you have the best you do not need the rest."
Ron Woods
Corporate Credit Manager-World Wide
Thales Navigation, Inc.
"The newsletter, coupled with the website and the ListServ, are to us, more valuable than any other credit publication, bar none. I try to use at least one article out of each newsletter for departmental training/discussion sessions."
D. Mark Constantine
Corporate Credit Mgr
Fulton Paper Company
"I love Credit Today and read every issue cover to cover. For me, the greatest perk of a subscription is ListServ. I believe Credit Today's ListServ members may be the most knowledgeable Credit brain trust in existence today. I have saved and categorized hundreds of contributions on a wide variety of topics which I refer to often. It's an easy and cost effective way to network and learn."
Doug M. Thomas
Kimberly-Clark Customer Financial Services |
|
|
|
Cash Discounts Are No Panacea
My company experienced a significant increase in days sales outstanding (DSO) during the first six months of last year. In addition, some of our more marginal credit risk customers were requesting larger credit limits, and it was becoming progressively more difficult to approve these larger credit limits. Borrowing the idea from one of our suppliers, the president of the company decided to offer a 1% cash discount in an effort to reduce DSO and as an incentive to our marginal customers to get them to pay more quickly. If this worked, we figured we could reduce our credit risk and ship more promptly. Unfortunately, things did not go exactly as planned.
The good news is that DSO did drop by a few days as certain customers began to take advantage of the cash discount for paying invoices within 15 days of the invoice date. Of course, we allowed a grace period, so it ended up that discounts were taken and allowed even if payments were received within 20 days of the invoice date.
The bad news is that DSO did not drop as much as we had expected and hoped it would. I was tasked with finding out why, and this is what I learned:
- Our more creditworthy customers took advantage of the cash discount far more frequently than the high-risk accounts we wanted to start discounting.
- When I asked, some of my customers told me that they were indifferent about a 1% discount for payment in 15 days compared to holding onto their cash for 30 or even 45 days.
- Some customers indicated they would be willing to discount if we increased the discount to 2% or more. Some customers indicated they were offered 3% or more by other companies and allocated cash based on the size of the discount.
Credit Management Portal
Unparalleled resources to help you with all aspects of the credit function: partnering with sales, reducing DSO, efficient ways to manage A/R, credit reporting resources, how today's credit leaders are solving problems, best practices in all phases of the quote to cash process...
Check out Credit Today's
Credit Management Portal
|
The program of offering discounts for prompt payment was not a total failure since DSO dropped by a few days. However, it was a failure to the extent that the high-risk customers we wanted to target were either
- Unable able to take advantage of the cash discount we offered due to their internal cash-flow problems, or
- By and large not interested in our 1% discount because other suppliers (who may also have identified these customers as representing an unacceptable credit risk) had already offered the customer cash discounts ranging from 2% to 4% as an incentive for early payment.
If there is a lesson here, it is that offering cash discounts is not a panacea for reducing credit risk.
Editor's Note: The above article originally appeared in the Credit & Collection Manager's Letter, a newsletter purchased by Credit Today in 2006. This article originally appeared prior to 2000.
| |
 |
 |
This month's topic: Extended Terms Requests
Click here to participate!
We're examining:
- Whether there has been an increase or decrease in requests for extended terms recently
- Whether or not credit departments have policies relative to extended terms requests
- Whether or not extended terms impact sales commissions
- What the primary factors are when considering extended terms requests
- Who is ultimately responsible for approving extended terms
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
July 2010
|
|
| S |
M |
T |
W |
T |
F |
S |
| |
|
|
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
|
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
|
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
|
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
|
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
|
|
|
 |
|
|