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Learn how to handle high-maintenance customers and navigate credit, financial, and legal challenges. Topics include invoicing, payments, dispute resolution, credit policies, risk management, and contract enhancements.
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DEALING WITH THE HIGH MAINTENANCE CUSTOMER: CREDIT, FINANCIAL AND LEGAL ISSUES FOR THE CREDIT TEAM Scott Blakeley, Esq. seb@blakeleyllp.com Orange County| Los Angeles| New York www.BlakeleyLLP.com Mark H. Speiser, CCE Director of Credit, N.A. Archer Daniels Midland Company Mark.Speiser@adm.com
What Makes an HMC (Experience from Credit Peers) • Invoicing and Account Maintenance • Unauthorized discounts • Unearned deductions • Withholding full payment on disputed invoice. • Out-of-date IT requirements • Cumbersome claim procedures to discourage resolution • Overly stringent supply chain requirements that appear to be profit centers • Always asking for copies of invoices and POD’s • EDI invoice receipt issues or a lack of compatibility • Manual entry of invoices into vendor A/P portal • Insists on order changes outside of normal operating processes • Failure to comply leads to deductions
What Makes An HMC • Credit Terms and Payments • Consistently slow pay, requiring countless phone calls and emails • Indispensable customer creates obstacles to payment, resulting in holding orders, impacting inventory, DSO and cash flow • Terms pushback: unilaterally changing terms • Demands continued shipment/service with no payment • Short pay invoices • “Lost” payments with checks • Regularly bounce checks • Repeatedly makes false payment commitments with multiple excuses
Cost of Write-offs Due 1 2 3 6 9 12 24
Is Customer an HMC? • Credit policy: Tolerance limit • Percentage of the invoice that is acceptable to stay current • Minimum amount to avoid credit hold • Dispute resolution practice • Key supplier metrics • DSO • Collection Effectiveness Index • Days Inventory Outstanding • Cash Conversion Cycle • Cash flow and working capital management
Credit Team Objectives • Payment predictability/collectability • Solvency/insolvency • Training and guiding team members • Identify traits of preferred customers • Create a database for flexible reporting • Automate to save time of credit team members
The Credit Team: Gatekeeper or Relationship Preserver • Who has the leverage in the relationship? • Punitive or accommodate response: reconciling the account under traditional and modern credit approaches • Leadership objectives and the voice of the sale's team • Net Income (after operating costs)? • Policy and procedures for reconciling to account, managing A/R and collection strategy • Robinson Patman antitrust considerations
Traditional Information Sources • Traditional/Criticism • Static and backward looking (customer financials) • Inconsistent especially with small and mid-sized • Lack of transparency
Social Media Sites for The Credit Team • Modern • Better transparency • Data analytics • Better able to capture risk flags in real time of small and mid-sized customers
Industry Information Regarding HMC's • Warning signs of delinquencies • A/R aging • Financial review • High credit risk score • Timing for what is considered delinquent • Collections • Judgments • Liens • Bankruptcy • Likelihood of small business to become severely delinquent • Monitoring accounts • Tighter lending practices • Vendors as lenders • Monitoring of bank lending, term dates and covenants
Revisiting A/R Portfolio and Credit Policies • Examine traditional signs of customer defaults and adjust policy accordingly • Point person for change in terms, credit hold or credit enhancement • Is credit policy too restrictive or too liberal? • Too loose or too restrictive must be formulated within the context of company goals and profit margins • Adjusting policy to signs of customer defaults • Using past insolvencies for predictive data points - data points are then run against current profile to further refine portfolio risk
Protocol for Risk Flags • Validating the credit risk flags • Consider aggregating multiple data sources to confirm original source before taking action • Responding to credit risk flags • Holding orders and meeting with customers • Attempt an in person meeting • Converting credit sales to cash • Demand written assurance of payment • Refuse delivery and demand cash under Article 2 of UCC • Stopping goods in transit • Reclaiming goods • Written demand for the return of the goods • Customer divorce and filing suit • If customer remains silent and account is not profitable • Credit team should consider collectability of and judgment against customer or guarantors before filing suit
Dealing with Past Due Invoices yet Maintaining Sales • Ways to determine type of HMC (Is the relationship salvageable?) • Request for financial information and confidentiality agreement • Third party comment • Salesperson and credit pro customer visit • Contact customer’s bank • Talk to industry group members and other suppliers • Landlord • Repayment agreements: fixing indebtedness and waiving claims • Credit enhancements • Dealing with insolvency
Complaining About A Customer’s Non Responsiveness: Disparagement • Continuous silence from customer • Credit team may exert some industry peer pressure to receive response • Avoid: • Complaining via email suggesting customer is untrustworthy or fraudulent and suggestion others should hold orders • Customer will end silence by claiming that the supplier has made a false statement and claim that they have been defamed
HMC Divorce • Divorce or preserve the trade relationship? • Indispensable customer? • Collaboration with leadership, sales and credit • Dropping the HMC may raise revenue and reduce expense • Economic conditions may force some credit teams to preserve HMC • Timing for assigning account to third party for collection • Document preservation with delinquent account
Insolvency and Preference Risk with HMC • Is customer an HMC because it can or because it must • Red flags that HMC may be insolvent • A/R risk • Preference risk • Email communications