Best Practice for New Credit Controllers

Starting in credit control can feel overwhelming. These practical tips help new controllers find their footing quickly.

Master Your System Early

Your ERP/accounting system is your foundation. Invest time learning it thoroughly. You’ll spend half your day in this system, so efficiency matters enormously. Ask for training. Build templates and shortcuts. The learning curve pays off immediately.

Document Everything

Develop the habit of writing things down. Conversation with a customer? Document it. Agreement made? Note it. Follow-up promised? Record it. Documentation protects you, ensures consistency, and creates institutional knowledge when you inevitably leave this role.

Build Relationships Within Finance

Credit doesn’t work in isolation. You need strong relationships with billing, accounting, and treasury. These teams are your partners, not your obstacles. Regular communication prevents problems.

Understand Payment Terms Thoroughly

Credit control begins with knowing what you promised customers. You can’t enforce terms you don’t understand. Know Net 30 versus Net 60. Know 2/10 net 30 discounts. Know COD requirements. When you understand terms deeply, everything else flows easier.

Listen More Than You Talk

New controllers often talk too much. In your first collection call, listen. Understand the customer’s perspective. Ask questions. Most customers want to pay. Understanding why they haven’t reveals solutions.

Follow Your Process Religiously

Your company has processes. Follow them. Don’t skip steps to be efficient. Processes exist because skipping them causes problems. Once you understand why processes exist, you can suggest improvements.

Find Your Mentor

Identify a strong credit professional (preferably in your company) and watch how they work. Ask questions. Observe how they handle difficult situations. This mentorship accelerates your learning dramatically.

Celebrate Small Wins

Collection work is incremental. You won’t solve everything immediately. Celebrate when you collect a difficult account. Recognize when you improve a metric. Small wins build momentum and motivation.

Ask Questions Constantly

You’re new. People expect questions. Ask them. The person asking questions is learning. The person pretending to know is making expensive mistakes.

Remember: You Protect Cash Flow

Credit control protects your company’s lifeblood, cash flow. Every dollar you collect sooner, every bad debt you prevent, directly impacts company survival and growth. Your work matters.

Starting your credit control career is exciting. For comprehensive guidance on building your skills, explore Chapter 1 of The Head of Credit & Collections Handbook

Free download included
Enjoyed this article?
Get more like it — free, every week
Join 10,000+ credit professionals who get the weekly Credit Brief — one insight, one tactic, one tool. Plus get the free Credit & Collections Glossary instantly on sign-up.
No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top
Free download included

Wait — before you go

Get the free Credit & Collections Glossary (120+ terms) plus the weekly Credit Brief — one insight, one tactic, one tool every week. Trusted by 10,000+ credit professionals.

Check your inbox — your free glossary is on its way!
Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
No spam. Unsubscribe any time.