The 2008 crisis revealed that credit control isn’t just about getting paid, it’s about protecting the company when everything else fails. Credit professionals who understood this emerged from the crisis as strategic assets. Those who viewed their role as purely administrative became casualties of cost-cutting.
Economic cycles repeat with different triggers each time, but the fundamentals of credit risk management remain constant. The crisis taught us that proper credit control is simultaneously an offensive tool enabling growth and a defensive shield protecting survival.
The companies that learned these lessons built credit functions that drive value in good times and preserve it in bad times. That’s the standard professional credit control should aspire to.
History provides perspective that improves decision-making. Follow our Throwback Thursday series for more historical insights, or explore Chapter 18 of The Head of Credit & Collections Handbook for comprehensive crisis management strategies that draw on decades of global experience.


