Sponsored Links

Featured Links

Other Topics
Sponsored Links





Quote of the Day

"The genius of our ruling class is that it has kept a majority of the people from ever questioning the inequity of a system where most people drudge along, paying heavy taxes for which they get nothing in return."

Gore Vidal








 




 
Featured Business Articles

Applying for a Business Loan
Copyright 2005 The Powerful PromoterThe process of applying for a business loan is a stringent one as compared to the standard procedures in obtaining a home mortgage loan or a personal loan. This is probably due to the fact that business loans contain a ...

Are Hidden Flaws in Your Business Preventing Your Success?
Ah, the joys of self employment...Good pay, flexible hours, excellent benefits, a wise and business savvy boss...And profitability, lots of profitability! If you're self employed, chances are your own company is missing some of the features that you might ...

A Gift Basket Home Business is an easy way to Wrap up Profits
You want to know more about making money with your own gift basket home business. You are a creative person and want a career that you can control and find rewarding at the same time. What better way to do this then to start a gift basket business in your ...




How factoring your invoices can help your business grow
 
Every day many business owners hit a wall. That wall prevents them from growing their business, or at least, severely limits the speed at which they can grow their companies. Sometimes, and especially for small and mid size businesses, the wall appears to be insurmountable. That wall is lack of working capital. Let's take a look at the most common source of working capital problems: extending payment terms to customers.

There are few things that small business owners hate to hear more than a customer utter the words, "We'll be happy to do business with you. However we pay net 45 days". As is well known, commercial clients like to pay their invoices in 30 to 45 days. As a business owner, you are expected to go through the trouble and expense of delivering your product or service on time... only to then wait 30 to 60 days to get paid.

It does not take a long time before the business has a lot of money tied up in their unpaid invoices - or accounts receivable. At this point the business may have more money in unpaid invoices than actual cash in the bank. When they reach the breaking point, they hit the wall. They can no longer supply new products until old invoices pay. Sometimes it's even worse. The business may stop operating until old invoices pay. Payroll is missed. Key suppliers are not paid. Unless this is fixed quickly, the business will certainly face major problems. If you hit the wall, there are two options. Either you step on the brake and stop growing your business, which means your competition gets the contracts, or you blast through the wall using some form of financing. Invoice factoring can help you do just that.

Your unpaid invoices are an asset - really!

Companies that hit the wall have a great asset that can be turned into immediate funds. They just don't know it. This asset is their unpaid invoices from credit worthy clients. Let me give you an example. Let's say that you have a $10,000 invoice from General Electric payable in 45 days. Do you think GE will pay? Isn't that invoice almost as good as money? Well, of course. GE is arguably one of the best and most financially stable companies on the planet. Most people would certainly consider that invoice to be "almost cash". Unfortunately, banks will seldom provide you any financing that relies on that "almost cash". However, there is a solution that relies solely on the power of your unpaid invoices. It is called factoring.

Invoice factoring. Financing your business without debt

Invoice factoring allows you to turn your slow paying invoices from good customers into immediate cash. It's a very simple transaction in which you trade an invoice - "almost cash" - for actual cash. Basically, the factoring company provides financing solely on the power of your soon to be paid invoices.

Provided that you have good customers, you can repeat this process for every invoice you have, almost indefinitely. If you sell products to good credit worthy customers, a factoring company will gladly buy your invoices. There are no limits, except how much you can sell.

One important thing to know about factoring is that it doesn't generate debt. The factor does not loan you money for your invoices. It buys them outright from you at a small discount. Since factoring is not a loan, qualifying for it is easy and your financial statements look cleaner. You just need a well-run business and great customers.

Who is a good candidate for factoring?

Factoring is a great resource for companies that have great paying - albeit slow paying - customers. To work well, the company should have profit margins of at least 15%. However, higher margins of 25% - 50% are more desirable.

Factoring works well for companies that have hit the wall and are turning away new business opportunities because of lack of money. In these instances, factoring will almost always allow you to grow your company immediately and will more than pay for itself.

Factoring works well for almost any industry. Some very successful staffing companies, trucking companies, IT consultancies, construction firms, manufacturers and service providers have used factoring to dramatically grow their businesses.

A sample factoring transaction

Let's take a look at a sample invoice factoring transaction. This will help you better understand how this financial tool works. Let's say that you have a company, called Super Services Inc. Super Services sells products to two clients. The clients are Company A and Company B. The factoring would look as follows:

1. Super Services delivers its products to Company A and Company B 2. Super Services sends Company A and Company B an invoice for its products. At the same time, it sends copies of the invoices to factor 3. The factoring company receives the invoices and advances funds to Super Services. Super Services can use the funds to grow the business 4. The factoring company waits to get paid. Once it gets paid, the transaction is settled

As you can see, invoice factoring is a fairly straightforward tool that allows business owners to capitalize on their most precious asset - their invoices.

Copyright © 2005 Commercial Capital LLC All rights reserved. This article may be reprinted, provided the resource box is included with live links.



About the author:

Invoice Factoring Group

Invoice Factoring Group and its small business invoice factoring subsidiary can provide you with factoring quotes at no cost to you. Marco Terry, its president, can be reached at 866-730-1922.



Business News


The Province

Airlines see decline in global business travel
MarketWatch - 16 hours ago
By Christopher Hinton, MarketWatch NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- A sharp drop in the number of business travelers in September bodes poorly for the future of ...
Airlines record sharp drop in business travel Reuters
IATA reports sharp fall in business travel TravelBite.co.uk
Premium Traffic Plummets – Silver Lining? Cheapflights.com
The Gazette (Montreal) - Emirates Business 24/7
all 137 news articles

Global Strategic Business Report Examines the Complex Plastic Industry
MarketWatch - 17 hours ago
DUBLIN, Ireland, Nov 19, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Research and Markets ( http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/8fea5a/plastics_global) has announced the ...
A Global Strategic Business Report on the Entertainment Industry ... MarketWatch
Research and Markets: Medical Devices and Diagnostics - Global ... MarketWatch
all 230 news articles

Wall Street Journal Blogs

Wells Fargo named top small-business lender in Texas
Bizjournals.com, NC - 20 hours ago
Wells Fargo Bank, NA has been ranked the leading small-business lender in both the United States and Texas, according to the latest Community Reinvestment ...
December 22 Is Deadline to Apply for SBA Economic Injury Disaster ... MarketWatch
Small business loans dwindle The Tennessean
Small-business seminar offers advice on financing Trading Markets (press release)
Sioux Falls Argus Leader - MLive.com
all 264 news articles

Ars Technica


Reynolds Foundation Gives ASU $5.34 Million for Business Journalism
MarketWatch - 5 hours ago
With the grant, the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication will create the Donald W. Reynolds Endowed Chair in Business Journalism, ...
Cronkite journalism school gains $5.3M for business program Bizjournals.com
all 14 news articles