Building a Credit Department from Scratch

Starting a credit function from nothing requires strategic thinking about structure, systems, and staffing. Many companies add credit management reactively after bad debt problems emerge. Better to build proactively.

When Companies Need Credit Departments

Growth Triggers:

  • Sales reaching $5-10M annually
  • Customer base expanding beyond 50 accounts
  • Bad debt exceeding 1-2% of sales
  • Cash flow problems from slow paying customers
  • Sales team lacking credit expertise

Small companies often have accounting handle credit informally. This breaks down at scale.

First Hire: The Credit Manager

Your first credit hire sets the foundation. Look for:

Experience Over Education: Someone who’s managed credit at similar sized company beats fresh MBA with no experience.

Systems Thinking: Must design processes from scratch, not just follow existing ones.

Sales Partnership Ability: Will work closely with sales. Adversarial relationships kill growth.

Technology Comfort: Must evaluate and implement credit systems.

Communication Skills: Will train others, set policies, interface with customers and executives.

Expect to pay $70K-$100K depending on location and industry for quality candidate.

Essential First-Year Priorities

Month 1-2: Assessment and Quick Wins

  • Review existing AR aging and identify problems
  • Implement basic credit application process
  • Establish credit hold procedures
  • Set up credit bureau access
  • Create initial credit policy draft

Month 3-4: Process Documentation

  • Document credit approval workflow
  • Create collection procedures
  • Establish dispute resolution process
  • Define reporting requirements
  • Set performance metrics

Month 5-6: Technology Implementation

  • Select credit management software
  • Implement basic automation
  • Integrate with ERP/accounting system
  • Set up reporting dashboards

Month 7-12: Optimization and Scaling

  • Refine credit policy based on results
  • Consider second hire if volume justifies
  • Enhance reporting and analytics
  • Develop customer segmentation
  • Build training materials for sales team

Technology Stack Priorities

Must Have Immediately:

  • Credit bureau access (Dun & Bradstreet, Experian, Equifax)
  • Basic credit management software or robust spreadsheet system
  • Document storage for credit files
  • Email system for customer communication

Add Within 6 Months:

  • Automated collections software
  • Reporting/BI tools
  • E-invoicing capability
  • Payment portal

Add Within 12 Months:

  • Advanced analytics
  • Predictive modeling
  • Workflow automation
  • API integrations

Don’t over invest in technology before understanding your needs. Start simple, add complexity as required.

Organizational Structure Decisions

Where Credit Reports:

  • Finance/CFO: Most common, emphasizes risk management
  • Sales/CCO: Emphasizes revenue enablement
  • Operations/COO: Emphasizes process efficiency

Finance reporting is standard and provides appropriate independence from sales pressure.

Policy Development

Your initial credit policy need not be comprehensive. Cover:

Credit Application Requirements:

  • What information customers must provide
  • Documentation needed for approval
  • Timeline for decision

Approval Authority:

  • Who can approve what amounts
  • Escalation procedures
  • Exception handling

Payment Terms:

  • Standard terms offered
  • Variations by customer type
  • Early payment discounts

Collection Procedures:

  • When to contact customers
  • Escalation timeline
  • Hold procedures

Write-Off Authority:

  • Thresholds requiring approval
  • Documentation requirements

Refine over time based on experience.

Metrics to Track from Day One

AR Metrics:

  • Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)
  • Aging buckets (Current, 30, 60, 90+)
  • Bad debt percentage

Credit Metrics:

  • Application approval rate
  • Average credit limit
  • Credit utilization

Collection Metrics:

  • Collection effectiveness
  • Promise-to-pay conversion
  • Dispute resolution time

Efficiency Metrics:

  • AR per FTE
  • Cost to collect
  • Credit decision cycle time

Start tracking immediately. Baseline data enables measuring improvement.

Common First-Year Mistakes

Over Tightening Credit: New credit managers often over compensate for past laxity, damaging sales relationships.

Under Documenting: Failing to document policies and procedures creates chaos as department grows.

Technology Over Investment: Buying enterprise software before understanding needs wastes money.

Ignoring Sales Partnership: Adversarial relationship with sales undermines credit function effectiveness.

Perfectionism: Waiting for perfect policy before implementing anything. Start with good-enough, improve continuously.

Building Sales Relationships

Credit’s success depends on sales partnership. Strategies:

Joint Training: Train sales on credit process and criteria

Regular Communication: Weekly sync meetings to discuss pipeline

Transparency: Explain credit decisions clearly

Responsiveness: Fast credit decisions enable sales success

Flexibility Within Boundaries: Say yes when possible, no when necessary

Sales should view credit as enabler, not blocker.

Measuring Success

Year one success indicators:

Process Metrics:

  • Written credit policy in place
  • Documented procedures
  • Technology implemented
  • Sales team trained

Performance Metrics:

  • Bad debt trending down
  • DSO stable or improving
  • Credit decisions faster than before
  • Fewer customer disputes

Relationship Metrics:

  • Sales satisfaction with credit function
  • Customer feedback positive
  • Executive confidence in credit management

Budget Considerations

First year budget typically includes:

  • Credit manager salary: $70K-$100K
  • Credit bureau subscriptions: $5K-$15K
  • Software: $10K-$50K
  • Training and professional development: $3K-$5K
  • Consulting/implementation support: $10K-$25K

Total: $100K-$200K for year one depending on company size and complexity.

ROI comes from reduced bad debt and improved cash flow.

The Long View

Building credit function is multi-year journey. Year one establishes foundation. Years two and three optimize and scale.

Success requires patience, executive support, and continuous improvement mindset.

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