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Hide & Seek
As president and CEO
of BITHGROUP Technologies Inc. (www.bithgroup.com), a Baltimore-based information technology company, Wallace sees
the inability or increased lag in securing outside funding as an incentive for
small businesses to look within. Turning a sharp gaze on your own operations,
inventory, payroll, and practices to potentially uncover financial resources
you can then reallocate is a doable and necessary task for any entrepreneur.
Here are three ways to speed up and increase inflows while slowing down and
reducing outflows.
1. Accelerate customers’ payments. Wallace recommends invoicing more
frequently—and more quickly. Invoicing smaller amounts at regular intervals or
when certain milestones are met can boost cash flow in contrast to receiving a
larger sum at the end of a project. “Be very aggressive in how you invoice your
clients,” says Wallace, who is also the author of six books including Black
Wealth: Your Road to Small Business Success (John Wiley& Sons). “A lot of
times small businesses procrastinate and don’t bill the customer as quickly as
they could.”
2. Obtain favorable payment terms. Negotiate to receive payment in 30 days or
less, 60 days maximum, to avoid being put in a position where you have to spend
money to pay suppliers for materials used to produce goods that you won’t get
paid for for months. “Provide a strong value proposition for the customer. For
example, say, ‘If you pay me within 15 days, I will decrease the invoice by
1%,’” Wallace recommends. Also build strong relationships with the people who
are responsible for paying your invoices; deliver excellent work and establish
a rapport to bolster the odds that invoices will be processed quickly.
3. Reduce inventory. Eric Dobyne, the Midwest regional director for the Minority
Business Development Agency (www.mbda.gov), says small business owners must balance eagerness to satisfy
customers with practical considerations. “A lot of companies hold an inordinate
amount of inventory or hold inventory for clients without charging them,” he
says. “That can be an enormous drain on a business. You’ve paid the cash out
and now you have those product s and materials that you can’t collect for.”
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