This article contains
Key takeaways
- Implementing a credit policy is crutial in improving cash generation and supporting profitable sales growth
- Credit policy should clearly address: The credit department structure, KYC procedures, Credit risk assessment of new customers, Terms and conditions, Monitoring and managing risk, and finally, collection procedures.
Drafting your credit policy
As a business grows and becomes more complex, there comes a point when the unwritten rules are no longer efficient, instead becoming an operational risk factor. Before this happens, it’s critical to design and implement a credit policy that clarifies the order-to-cash journey. This document needs to reflect the company’s risk appetite and take into consideration margins as well as the product/geography mix, cash flow and financing specificities.
This policy will help protect and improve cash generation and support profitable sales growth – especially in an uncertain economic landscape.
Your policy’s level of sophistication can vary depending on the size of the business and of your teams allocated to credit management. But whatever its complexity level, your credit policy should clearly address the following topics:
1. Credit department structure
Your document should include an authority matrix identifying the role and responsibility of any employee involved in credit management. It should answer questions including:
• “Who approves credit limits for each threshold?”
• “Who approves special terms and payment plans in case of overdues?”
• “What is the role of the sales team?”
2. KYC procedures
3. Credit risk assessment of new customers
4. Terms and conditions / setting a credit limit
The longer the payment terms, the higher the impact on your cash cycle and on your potential risk. In addition to the expected payment timeline, this section should include accepted means of payment, with related risk treatment, and whether there’s a retention of title option (whether your company retains legal ownership of goods sold until certain obligations are fulfilled by the customer). You should also outline on which basis a customer may be converted from having to provide secured, up-front payment to being granted credit based on cycles and payment records. Your credit limit for each type of client should factor in the forecasted payment terms and volumes, but also the customer’s purchasing capacity based on the credit assessment.
These terms all need to be aligned with your company’s management strategy, market practice and competitive position. Any exceptions need to be defined in the credit policy.
5. Monitoring and managing risk
6. Collection procedures
Managing credit risk also means having clear procedures enabling you to act fast when things go wrong. Employees need to know which approach to use in communicating with your customers, as well as how to manage escalations and payment plan negotiation processes. Is it clear at which point they should send the account to a collection agency or enter into a legal process? Advanced credit policies also include guidelines on a set of quantitative KPIs to support credit management control. This includes:
• Day Sales Outstanding (DSO), or the average number of days that it takes your company to collect payments, broken down by risk category and measured over time
• Overdues evolution
• The level of disputes regarding receivables and bad debt provisions
• Your collection effectiveness index
Supporting companies in their credit management
Financial Insights and Resources
Our expertise and commitment
Allianz Trade is the global leader in trade credit insurance and credit management, offering tailored solutions to mitigate risks, thereby ensuring the financial stability of businesses. Our products and services help companies with risk management, cash flow management, accounts receivables protection, Surety bonds, and e-commerce credit insurance ensuring the financial resilience for our client’s businesses. Our expertise in risk mitigation and finance positions us as trusted advisors, enabling businesses aspiring for global success to expand into international markets with confidence.
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