When
times are tough, as well as making sure you get in all the cash
that’s owed to you, and managing your cash flow, you also have to
deal with your creditors. Unless you manage and pay for your taxes
and procurement efficiently, nasty things can happen. If you have
clear business policies for managing creditors that you follow
consistently, you are less likely to reach crisis point. Even if you
do run into cash flow problems, they will be easier to deal with if
you have set the right priorities and kept up good relationships with
your suppliers.
Enlist
the help of your bookkeepers
to decide which creditors are most important to you. If you
have outstanding loans or anything on hire purchase, your lenders
will probably top the list. If you rent your premises, your landlord
will be up there too, as well as any providers of the essential
services needed for your business to operate.
Other
creditors likely to penalise non-payment heavily include HMRC which
has to be satisfied at the right time on PAYE, NIC and VAT as well as
corporation tax and personal tax. Don’t forget your local
authority’s business rates.
Next
on the list are those specialist suppliers without whose goods you
cannot operate. Sadly for suppliers of small consumables that you can
always purchase elsewhere, they will usually be placed last.
Payment
Policies
Every
business should have a general policy on payment, such as making a
batch of BACS payments or signing and sending cheques on a certain
date each month. Your bookkeepers will tell you that you still have
to maintain some flexibility though, so that these payment procedures
can be adjusted and one-off payments made where necessary.
Communication
Making
time to keep in touch with suppliers is as important as talking to
your debtors. You need to be sure they are aware of your payment
policies and are in agreement with them, or that other arrangements
have been made to accommodate them. Staying in touch can have
advantages for you: if they understand your business, they may be
able to make helpful suggestions you haven’t already considered.
Agreements with suppliers can have mutual benefits if both parties
communicate and understand each other.
Market
testing is something you should do periodically. If you discover
alternative suppliers who offer better terms, check if your current
ones will match them or improve their own terms enough for you to
want to remain with them. Don’t forget that your outsourced
bookkeepers probably know of the best suppliers
of commonly sought items.
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