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Site Home › Business & Services › Small Businesses
 

Bringing Home the Bacon

 
Author: Jan Verhoeff

In general, all of us know how to accomplish the task and get the work done. The problem is in how to actually get paid for what we do. If you, like me and most of the entrepreneurs Ive worked with, have completed the project, turned it in and been left holding the proverbial bag waiting to be paid for months on end, you are probably just as tired of that scenario as the rest of us. So what can we, as entrepreneurs, do about that particular scenario?

A few months ago I might have answered that there is not much that can be done about it. However, great strides have been made in my business sense in the past several months. I got tired of turning the other cheek and taking it in the pocket (bad pun intended).

There are many scenarios that just dont work in the process of collecting for completed work, if you are a one-man show. Some of those include traditional collection agencies, legal action against the client, repeated billing for completed jobs, and the tiger claw through the phone ideology. These are just a few of the techniques tried and failed. The reality is that the majority of other businesses are either looking for a free handout and you are the hand providing it, out to stiff you, really dont have the financial backing to pay you for the job you do for them, or once the service is completed you are no longer a necessity for them and they avoid you.

Many of us have resorted to the deposit and final draft methods of collection, leaving only a small balance unpaid at the time the client receives the completed project. This is highly effective, and you do get paid for your work.

Development of this type of collection takes some thought and development of the process using the following steps:

Work by bid/proposal contracts.

Develop a process of billing that allows you to provide a proposal for the job you will be doing for each client. This proposal or bid (if you will) is a description of the job you will be doing in as complete a form as possible and acts as a contract for the job you will be doing. It includes a collection process that you will carry through during the time you are working for the client.

Collect an initialization fee.

When you get the signed contract portion of the proposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

Collect a final stage amount.

At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

Final collection on delivery of product/service.

The final payment should be due on delivery or installation of your product or service, or at the very most within thirty days of delivery. This amount should not in anyway include your personal pay or costs of delivering the product. It should be only a portion of the profit for the completed project. Any discounts allowed to the customer should come out of this amount and only at the time of completion of the job and payment, never prior to this.

Using this method to collect for a job ensures that you will be paid for the job you do and establishes a contractual agreement with the client that the job will be done. It is actually a secure way to provide the excellent service and product that your clients want and deserve while assuring your business financial stability. The financial stability of your business determines your personal financial status. Your personal financial stability is at risk in this manner, you need to be shrewd and creative in solving the problem of collections for your company from the earliest development of your business plan. If your collections process is not working in your business, you cannot bring the bacon home.

Copyright 2001 Jan Verhoeff Printed in the USA

Author Bio:

Jan Verhoeff

Somewhere between college and life, Jan began to focus on other people. Her intense need to feel accomplishment in her life drove her to finding a deeper contentment than just existing in the hoot 'n holler of southeastern Colorado. While the beauty of the prairie never escaped her eye for color and beauty, the intensity of her desire kept her moving ever onward.

Summers in Michigan and Tennessee brought her closer to something, but it wasn't until much later, as an adult, mother of four that she began to understand that her need for accomplishment included sharing what she had learned along the way. It also meant that her talent for painting the dream and writing her thoughts had a lot to do with her accomplishments.

She began to focus on actually writing down her thoughts and ideas in journals, revealing her prayer thoughts and life events. Bits of paper became treasures of memory, and a notebook became an outlet of hope and a step of faith. Jan put her thoughts on paper, and began to publish them, where she found opportunity, including various magazines, trade journals, and local publications. Her interests in business and new enterprise became a resounding outlet for her talent, and wisdom for those who sought it. Jan's interest in business development became her trademark, resulting in her first book publication in !992, "Building a Business: From Scratch". This 22 page booklet was published by a local printer in a vertical brochure format, selling more than a thousand copies nation wide. It has resurfaced in college classes as the basis for college term papers, graduate thesis, and research documents for small business courses over the past 13 years.

Seeking more diverse outlets for her talents, Jan most recently has written several short stories published in various books, including: "Stories for the Trail" with the Lamar Writer's Group, "Prickly Points of Life" a combination poetry/short story collection of Jan's work, and "Coffee Clatter" a bound collection of written works originally published in a newsletter published by her daughter, Brenna, as a Sophomore Year Project when she was homeschooling at Buchanan Academy.

More recently her work is available in a newsletter she publishes weekly via email, and various blogs listed on the right side of this page.

You may contact Jan at: janverhoeff@yahoo.com

You can search for this article using: small business, small business opportunity, small business online assistance
 
 
 

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