We surveyed over 500 Australian small business owners and decision-makers to understand how they really feel about chasing late payments. From awkward conversations to generation gaps, SMBs are struggling – but solutions are in sight.
Those who had avoided a chat about money with their customers in the last 12 months were impacted in many different ways.
43%
experienced increased stress on them personally
37%
experienced increased stress at work
36%
said their business was paid late
31%
said it resulted in financial losses for their business
29%
said they suffered from lack of clarity (e.g unable to predict cash flow)
27% of SMBs estimate they lose up to $6,000 from late payments annually. One in 10 say they lose between $12,000-$30,000.
12% say they wouldn’t know how to broach the topic, compared to 5% of men. And 24% of women find the conversation too uncomfortable vs. 14% of men.
55% of Aussie business leaders are concerned that the number of late-paying customers will increase over the next 12 months due to the rising cost of living.
58% are more likely to speak to customers about late payments now, compared to last year. Of those, 55% say it's because they need to get paid to cover their own rising costs.
Every successful, on-time payment comes down to two dimensions: willingness to pay and ability to pay. Once you understand where your payers fall, you can take action.
Take the onus of paying off your customer. Try a method like Direct Debit which automatically pulls the payment on the day it's due.
Your dream customers. Keep doing what you're doing.
Embrace new technology like PayTo, with bank-grade security that makes it much harder for fraudsters to succeed.
Automate your payments with pull-based methods such as Direct Debit, so money is collected on the day it's due.
By analysing the source of your late payments, you can take action to stop them. This will reduce the amount of awkward conversations and cash flow woes that you experience.