Posts Tagged ‘Bad Debt’

Use Zlien And The Lien Laws To Reduce Your Bad Debt in 2012

Use Zlien And The Lien Laws To Reduce Your Bad Debt in 2012

As the holiday season winds down and 2012 approaches, everyone in the construction industry is looking back on the fiscal successes and failures from 2011, and making plans for the new year. Many businesses will be staring at a mound of “bad debt,” which may be written off when tax time approaches this spring.  You may be wondering, what can I do to stop accumulating so much bad debt?  Let us help you plan for 2012.

The High Costs of Bad Debt?

Think you can just write off your bad debt?  It’s not quite that simple. While there are certainly deductions available to you under the tax code to accommodate some of your bad debt, it’s irresponsible for you to write off uncollected receivables year after year without analyzing its effect on your company’s bottom line.  Unpaid receivables even in small amounts can have a very significant impact on your company’s profitability.

Let’s say you have just $5,000 of unpaid receivables, and you have a net profit margin of 5%.  Your company will need to make $100,000 in revenue to compensate for the lost $5,000.  That’s a significant amount of money to offset the loss of such a small debt.  Now, think about $20,000 of unpaid receivables, $100,000, or more.  The impact to a company’s bottom line can be staggering.

Filing Mechanic Liens Will Get You Paid More Often

Many feel that filing a mechanics lien is too aggressive, or that it will risk impairing a relationship with a good customer. The fact remains, however, that it’s hands-down the best way for someone in the construction industry to reduce their bad debts.

A few months ago I wrote a White Paper titled: 5 Ways A Mechanics Lien Can Get You Paid.  To summarize that White Paper, mechanic liens have a host of consequences to a project, including freezing funds, eliminating the property owner’s ability to sell, refinance or transfer the property, securing your debt with the project’s property as collateral, and more.  When you file a mechanics lien properly and timely, an entire symphony of pressure points are pushed, and this results in getting you paid more often than not.

If you have any unpaid receivables at the end of 2011, a well-executed plan to protect and exercise your mechanic lien rights is your solution. You’ll see a huge difference in your bottom line.  To take advantage of the lien laws, however, you need to follow a lot of rules.  Here’s what you’ll need to know.

Part I:  Protect Your Lien Rights From The Start Of Work

In creating a mechanics lien plan, the first thing you need to know is that Filing A Lien Is A Discipline, And Not A Knee-Jerk Reaction. Namely, you have to begin protecting your lien rights by filing certain preliminary notices at the very beginning of every project.

I’ve discussed preliminary notices quite a bit on this blog (see Preliminary Notices category). The long and short of these discussions is that in many states, you’re required to deliver to certain parties a notice formally putting them on notice that you’re furnishing labor and/or materials to the project.  This notice is due within a certain amount of time from when you begin work, and if you miss your window to send the notice, you will forfeit your lien rights.  Ouch.

If you do three, four, five some-odd projects each year, sending the preliminary notice in-house is not going to be a big deal, although you’ll risk making a mistake.  However, for those companies who have a lot of preliminary notice filings each month or quarter, it’s probably a good idea to outsource this service.  Knowing when a notice is required is important, as is getting the notice prepared properly and sent timely.  Without it, the mechanics lien plan just won’t work.  Period.

Part II:  Exercise Your Lien Rights If Unpaid

So, you’ve filed your preliminary notices when required and protected your lien rights.  Things have been going well, but you’ve encountered a client who is not paying its invoice.  What now?

The next step is to exercise your lien rights by filing your mechanics lien. Like preliminary notices, this must be filed within a certain amount of time, which each state having different claim periods (Calculate Lien Deadlines with Zlien’s LienPilot).  Liens are typically filed after you’ve finished or stopped providing services, and after an amount of money has become due to you.

Be careful when filing your lien because there are lots of traps for the unwary.  In fact, you may be well served to use a service like Zlien, who will prepare, file and serve your mechanics lien for a flat fee. Once your mechanics lien is filed and served, you can then make additional attempts to collect the debt.

A lot of times, the filing of a mechanics lien alone will be enough to turn things around and get payment. If you remain unpaid, however, you’ll need to move to the final step, as the mechanic lien will not tie up the property forever.

Part III: Enforce Your Lien Rights With Suit

The idea behind a mechanics lien is that you’re constricting alteration of the property’s title in any way, so that if you’re debt is not paid you could theoretically call upon the sheriff to seize the property and sell it to pay off your debt.  If the filing of the lien alone does not produce payment, you will want to begin taking steps to enforce your lien and requesting the property’s acquisition and sale.

This request is done through an ordinary lawsuit filed against the property owner (and frequently also the prime contractor and party who hired you). You’ll be required to prove that your debt is owed, and if you prevail at trail and get a judgment, the judgment would request the sheriff to proceed to foreclose on the project’s property.

This is a long road and most liens get resolved before going this far…but, you must take those first steps in the journey and understand the procedure to most effectively use your lien rights.

A Guarantee

When account receivables are at issue, it’s hard to guarantee anything.  However, in my experience of helping suppliers and contractors around the country implement quality credit policies and mechanic lien plans, I can guarantee you that a well-planned and executed mechanics lien plan will nearly eliminate your bad debts in 2012 and beyond.

When thinking about a mechanics lien plan, understand that implementing it in-house will be very, very difficult.  There are so many state requirements which differ depending on your tier in the project, the project type, and other variables.  Keeping up with these changes and differences is impossible if you’re not in the business of doing it. Therefore, again, your best option is to outsource this stuff.  And that’s a positive thing, because it means you can implement a mechanics lien plan, turn around your bad debt situation, and not create additional work for your business.

 

Posted in:     Collection Laws & Tips, Lien Management, Our Services & Us  /  Tags: , , , ,   /   1 Comment

How To Prevent A Deadbeat Customer From Taking Advantage Of You

I found a pithy and pointed article on Inc.’s website providing businesses with 5 Tips to Ensure Customers Pay You On Time. The article references a RocketLawyer.com survey revealing that 25% of companies have trouble collecting payments, and of those 60% had to write off the bad debt. The Inc. writer then rattles off 5 tips to help avoid falling into these percentages. In essence, these are tips to avoid and manage potential deadbeat customers. The article summary explains: “Every business runs into deadbeat customers. Here’s how to make sure they don’t take advantage of you.

Why Avoiding Bad Debt Is Important

You probably don’t need me to explain exactly why bad debt should be avoided. Absolutely no one is a fan of bad debt. However, it is worth taking a moment to discuss the true costs of bad debt.

It’s a common misconception that the cost of bad debt equals the cost of the outstanding invoice, but nothing is further from the truth. Bad debt can have far reaching consequences, not the least of which is the need for your company to pay off the total amount of the bad debt with profits earned elsewhere. If you’re running a profit margin of 10%, and you have a $10,000.00 bad debt, you’ll need $100,000 of revenue to make up for the $10,000 lost. That’s a heavy hit to your bottom line.

General Tips To Avoid Bad Debt and Deadbeat Customers

So, what can your company do to be better at avoiding bad debt?

The Inc. article had a few tips that are worth repeating, some proactive and some reactive, as I’ll discuss in more detail below. Among the proactive tips are to perform a background check, create and sign a contract, and then bill customers consistently. Among the reactive steps are to have an attorney send a demand letter and to send the nonpaying customer to collections.

I think these are great tips, and certainly not novel collection tools. In fact, these are similiar to the tips I’ve suggested in the past within the Construction Lien Blog’s Collections category, and also on my law firm’s blog: The Construction Law Monitor.

Those in the construction industry should understand these general tips, and use them, but I have really great news. Mechanic lien and bond claim laws provide those in the construction industry with the most powerful collection tools in any industry, all explained below.

Proactive Collection Tips for Contractors & Suppliers

There are a few things contractors, suppliers and others in the construction industry can do proactively to avoid bad debts and deadbeat customers. Two years ago, I discussed this generally in a post titled: “Filing A Lien Is A Discipline, Not A Knee Jerk Reaction”. The point of the post rings true still today, which is that if you want to file a lien to protect your right to get paid (and you shoulds want this), you need to take steps at the beginning of the construction project to protect your lien rights.

In many states, this means sending a preliminary or pre-lien notice to other participants in the construction project. Your state may or may not require this, and it may or may not be required depending on your role in the project; but if you must send the notice by law, the failure to send the notice will cause you to forfeit all of your lien rights.

When looking to collect on a construction project, having lien rights can prove vital. Look at this article to learn just a few of the reasons why liens produce payment.

Aside from protecting your right to later file a lien, the act of sending your preliminary notice is actually enough to increase the odds you’ll be paid. Those companies who send notice usually are given top priority when its time to get paid, as the prime contractor and the owner know, if payment isn’t made to them, they could lien!

Reactive Collection Tips for Contractors & Suppliers

When I say “reactive collection tip,” I am talking about things you can to collect from a deadbeat customer after they have already failed to pay. Therefore, this action is in reaction to the non-payment.

And to what am I going to refer? Filing a lien or bond claim, of course.

We have a tag here on this mechanics lien blog titled “Why Lien” It’s a collection of blog posts that express why it’s important to file a lien when you’re unpaid, and within those posts we repeat this many times: Filing a mechanics lien or bond claim is the best collections tool available to you.

If your proactive measures were unsuccessful and you still have a collections problem, the best thing you can do is file a mechanics lien or bond claim. Be sure to file it timely, and be sure to get it filed correctly!

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Liens Are Just One Way To Collect Debt – Other Best Collection Practices

Liens Are Just One Way To Collect Debt   Other Best Collection PracticesI love a great article about collection practices.   Not only is a topic I’ve written about in the past (see posts from this blog here, and from the Construction Law Monitor here), but it’s one of the more important topics for those in the construction industry.

Consider the “bad debt calculator” on Construction Indemnity Group’s website.  I love this calculator, because it puts the tragedy of bad debt in your face.   Take a modest amount of bad debt ($25,000), and a candid profit margin (5%), and you’ll see that it takes $500,000 of revenue to recover the lost income.   Amazing.

Last week, Melissa Brumback’s Construction Law in North Carolina blog posted a blog post with “8 Best Collection Practices.”   The article does a great job of hitting on the things you can do to minimize your bad debt – and things, that we’ve even said over and over:   Be careful when extending credit, have a written contract, and don’t let too much time pass before implementing your collection procedures.

These, of course, are just a few tips.  The post does a great job of enumerating each tip and discussing their importance, so there is not need for me to regurgitate it here…just take a look at Melissa’s post for more.

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Mechanic’s Lien Solution

  • The most potent tool you have to manage receivables is to preserve, perfect and enforce your mechanics lien and bond claim rights. But, it's so complex? Zlien is a revolutionary enterprise offering to monitor your lien deadlines and automatically file required documents.

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