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Will it suit your business?
The advantages offered by factoring to a business
can be tremendous. Still, the arrangement requires careful
management in order to reap the full benefits. Consider how
suitable factoring is to your business’s particular
needs and whether it will ease your current operations, or
needlessly complicate them.
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Working With A Factor
Businesses work best with a factor are those
that are expanding and have considerable amounts of capital
tied up in trade debts. Factoring lets you work around those
debts and transform them into useful capital.
Factoring is suited for situations where the
deliverables are clearly defined. (e.g. service rendered,
goods delivered or work completed).
To get the factoring process underway, documents
of completion such a signed delivery receipt or a filled-out
timesheet are required. Not every kind of transaction can
be worked into a factor, and you may have to adjust your operations
accordingly to make the process as efficient and as inclusive
as possible. Or you may try to source a factor that can work
with your existing systems.
In general, factoring is based on fixed-period
credit terms of ninety days or less. If your operations do
not normally fit within that interval, you may need to sort
out your debt-recovery system before trying to work it into
the factoring process.
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Sharing Information (or
Disclosing Information)
Before discussing the terms of agreement for
your business, a factor will first need to go over your sales
records in order to know how many customers you deal with,
assess their credit-worthiness and find out the quality your
business relations with them. In general, having fewer customers
equates to a greater amount of risk for the factor. Your past
debt collection track record is also taken into account.
Furthermore, your paper trail is examined
to determine the adjustments required of your existing system
in order to integrate the factoring process seamlessly into
your operations.
The factor expects to be kept up-to-date with
any changes while working with you, and they need to know
that the process is accountable at every stage in order to
reduce chances for error or miscommunication.
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The Effect On Your Bookkeeping
(Bookkeeping Considerations)
Letting a factor completely handle your sales
ledger would most likely result in savings from reduced administration
overheads, but you may prefer to maintain a set of parallel
books as means of checks and balance against any possible
errors committed on the factor’s side.
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The Best Way To Integrate With a Factor
(Or, Integrating With a Factor)
For businesses that use SAGE or a similar
bookkeeping system, the most effective approach may be to
consider the factor as a bank account. In doing this, you
do not have to alter the way you maintain your sales ledger,
and there is no need to expand the ledger to include the factor.
Payments from the factor can be treated as account transfers.
The factor will update you daily on any payments
received from customers. These can be defined as “receipts”
and credited accordingly in your ledger, and credit the payments
to creditors as listed in the report from the factor.
Charges paid to the factor may be treated
just as payments to any supplier and an account in the purchase
ledger can be opened in the factor’s name for invoices
to be posted.
Monthly statements from the factor are then
checked against your own accounting records in the same manner
as a current account. The factor will also submit a copy of
their accounting of your sales ledger which needs to be checked
against the information that you recorded.
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