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How big is your bad debt problem?

When you keep your side of the bargain with a customer, it is only fair that they should keep theirs by paying you… and paying you on time. Sadly, as everyone in business knows, this doesn’t always happen.

How big is the problem?

The bad debt calculator below shows you how many extra sales you will have to make in order to recoup the profit you lose on a single bad debt. For example, if your profit margin is 10%, and a £5000 invoice is not paid, then you will have to make another £50,000 worth of good sales to make up the profit lost on the one bad sale. Shocking, isn’t it?

Your profit margin Bad debts
% £100 £1,000 £5,000 £10,000 £50,000 £100,000
1% £10,000 £100,000 £500,000 £1 million £5 million £10 million
3% £3,333 £33,333 £166,666 £333,333 £1.7 million £3.3 million
5% £2,000 £20,000 £100,000 £200,000 £1 million £2 million
10% £1,000 £10,000 £50,000 £100,000 £500,000 £1 million
15% £666 £6,666 £33,333 £66,666 £333,333 £666,666
20% £500 £5,000 £25,000 £50,000 £250,000 £500,000
30% £333 £3,333 £16,666 £33,333 £166,666 £333,333
40% £250 £2,500 £12,500 £25,000 £125,000 £250,000
50% £200 £2,000 £10,000 £20,000 £100,000 £200,000

Why does it happen?

In their 1999 survey, business finance specialists Alex Lawrie asked UK companies why they paid invoices late. The top ten reasons given by credit controllers were as follows:

23% Waiting for the cheques to be signed
22% Invoice lost
16% Cashflow problems
15% Person dealing with it is unavailable or off sick
6% Cheque is in the post
5% Waiting for the cheque run or for a new cheque book
3% The invoice is being disputed
2% We pay on 60/90 days – not 30 days
2% Missed the payment run

On a lighter note, some of the more bizarre reasons given by credit controllers when refusing to pay included:

  • “The  owner has been buried with his cheque book”
  • “All names are put in a hat. If yours is drawn out you get paid. If not it  stays in the hat for next month”
  • “I do not speak English”
  • “We’re  in the middle of an armed robbery”
  • “Not  now, its the office party”

Next in this series of posts, we’ll suggest ways to make sure you don’t have a bad debt problem.

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Why choose an ICAEW Chartered Accountant?

Legally anyone can call themselves an accountant. However to belong to the ICAEW, a member must complete a 3 year training contract with a firm authorised by the Institute and pass extensive examinations encompassing accounting, financial management, audit, business strategy, tax and IT.

ICAEW Chartered Accountants can be recognised by the ACA or FCA after their name.

As ICAEW Chartered accountants, we:

  • are committed to Continued Professional Education every year, to keep our knowledge and training up to date;
  • hold an ICAEW Practising Certificate and Professional Indemnity insurance;
  • are subject to review by the ICAEW Practice Assurance scheme, which demonstrates our commitment to quality assurance, and upholding and developing the highest professional standards.

Why settle for something less in your accountant?

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An HMRC Horror story

Elsewhere on the site we outlined the terrible experience of DJ Louise Stones who made the mistake of relying on HM Revenue’s advice rather than engage an accountant.

Now we’ve found an even more horrible story (warning – contains strong language).

Radio 5 Live’s Victoria Derbyshire took a call from a business man who had been the receiving end of an HM Revenue Tax Investigation.

The call was from Danny who, 10 years ago, was chosen for investigation by HM Revenue & Customs into accounts at his successful consultancy. He began his story composed, and given that it was all a decade ago, you assumed he would stay that way. But then, after one and half minutes, as he got to the bit about spending two years and £58,000 to prove that he had done nothing wrong, he cracked. It sounded as if another man was speaking now and, in one sense, it was: the man after an investigation he described as “brutal“.

It wasn’t just how he spoke, but the bleakness of what he was saying. “I was once a very proud man,” he said. “Now I take antidepressants and I don’t work any more. They ruined me…”

If Danny has been correctly advised and had professional support he may never have been subjected to this stressful enquiry. Even if he was, that support could have brought matters to a quicker and more satisfactory conclusion.

Danny shouldn’t even have had to worry about fees for dealing with this. We offer Tax Investigation Insurance that indemnifies you against the cost of dealing with any HM Revenue & Customs enquiry.

 

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