grandad wrote:
I would not entertain a 90 day account under any circumstances. I used to work in engineering and we had a couple of customers that had 90 day accounts. All would be well for a while but then you would get a big increase in business from them but 4 months down the line, 90 days from invoice plus the month that the invoice was for, you don't get paid. You spend the next month chasing the payment and now it is nearly 5 months so you put them on stop. You now have outstanding balances from 5 months of work and the company goes bust owing you all the money. You can't get it because there are no assets. The company starts up again with a slightly different name but you have been well and truly stuffed.
Wise words, but many big businesses have been notoriously slow payers, particularly in relation to small businesses, but getting paid isn't wnecessarily an issue - it's how long you have to wait for it.
Many big businesses basically use their commercial muscle to dictate terms to smaller businesses, because they know that to a large extent the smaller entity has no choice in the matter.
After all, if a big business can delay paying thousands of small suppliers while demanding promt payment from its customers then it can help their liquidity enormously and they know they can get away with it.
For the small business it's just like any other commercial transaction - are the payment terms worth it to keep the business? It's not black and white, it's a question of weighing up the various pros and cons.