The 9 steps in the accounts receivable process
The 9 steps in the accounts receivable process
Before you send the customer the sales order, your credit manager or
credit department will review and approve it.
When you sell on account, you agree to extend credit to your customers
and collect payment later. Most business-to-business (B2B) purchases are
made on account.
You’ll do this through the credit application process, which can take
several days. Your business should have a documented credit policy,
which you’ll use to assess customers’ credit risk. Your risk tolerance may
vary depending on your business’ size, margins, and current cash flow.
If you determine that a potential customer isn’t a good fit for receiving
credit, you might arrange alternative payment terms like cash on delivery.
Accounting teams will typically create their invoices in their ERP or using a
program like Microsoft Word or Excel, then deliver them to customers by
email, electronic data interchange (EDI), or regular mail. The faster you
can get your invoices out the door, the better. The longer it takes
customers to receive their invoice, the more time goes by before your
payment terms officially start.
For this reason, it’s in your best interest to eliminate as much manual
work—like printing invoices and stuffing envelopes—as possible from your
billing practices.
Some portion of your customers will inevitably pay their invoices late. To
increase your chances of collecting on unpaid invoices promptly, it’s
important to have your collections staff follow up with customers at
regular intervals.
Below are some time frames commonly used by companies for carrying
out their collections outreach:
<7 days past due: First contact with the customer to provide a
gentle reminder about the payment
8–14 days past due: Second contact with the customer
15–30 days past due: Third contact with the customer; an
official dunning letter can go out stating the payment is 30 days late
(late fees may also kick in after this time)
31–45 days past due: Fourth contact with the customer; if the
request is still unactioned a final letter can go out
46–60 days past due: Continued outreach (for example, every 5
business days)
61–90 days past due: If the request is still unactioned at this
point, you may want to involve senior management, legal counsel,
or a collection agency for help pursuing the debt (if the amount
owed is worth it—if not, you’ll simply write off the amount as
uncollectible)
As you’ll see in the flow chart below, some steps in the collections
process are circular, as you’ll carry out the same actions until you receive
the payment or deem it to be uncollectible.
The accounts receivable collections process
This flow chart provides an overview of the accounts receivable collections
process and when to conduct your outreach.
Customers will often pay the portion of their invoice that’s not in dispute
(a short payment), which adds another layer of complexity for your AR
team. They’ll have to confirm why the short payment happened, whether
it was for a valid reason, and how to apply the payment in your
accounting system.
Your AR team should kick off the dispute investigation process as early as
possible (as soon as an invoice becomes overdue) to prevent payments
from getting delayed further and preserve customer relationships.
The point at which you deem an invoice uncollectible will vary by your
industry. For some industries, like transportation services for example, an
average days sales outstanding (DSO) of above 50 days is normal. If late
payments are common in your line of work, it makes sense to wait before
writing off an invoice as bad debt.
ACH or EFT
Wire transfer
Debit, credit, or virtual card
Checks
Note that although lockbox services eliminate the need for you to receive
checks at your office, they don’t take away the effort involved in
processing them. Going through lockbox files to apply payments to
invoices still takes work.
After you receive a payment, then comes the process of cash application,
where you’ll record that revenue in your accounting software.
When a payment comes in, you’ll record the transaction in your accounts
receivable ledger as a credit, deducting the amount from your remaining
unpaid receivables.
There are several factors that can complicate this step, such as:
In these cases, AR staff have to reach out to the customer to get clarity on
how they should apply their payment, as you’ll see in the flow chart
below.
The cash application process
This flow chart provides an overview of the cash application process, and
when AR staff requires customer input on where to apply their payment.
During the month end close process, your finance team will check that
they’ve recorded all transactions and put the closing balance of
all general ledger accounts into a report (a trial balance). This allows you
to put together financial statements for that period to report to the rest of
the company.
There’s a variety of metrics you can use to assess the health of your
accounts receivable. In a recent survey we conducted with SSON, we
found that the metrics most frequently used by businesses to gauge AR
performance are DSO, staff productivity, and collections effectiveness
index.