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In a an ideal world, the customer would pay for the products/services he/she has purchased, but
in the real world people often remain reluctant to pay even after the term of payment has been
agreed upon (Rampton). Moreover, new private businesses often fail to recover bad debts within
time and not at all sometimes, which reduces their inflow of cash and causes disturbances within
their cash flow management system. Bad debts are simply put those account receivables which
fail to pay back the amount they owe to the business. As far as the giants of the industries are
concerned, they can easily recover from such cases because they usually have deeper pockets.
However, in the case of a new private business, the budget allowed for such cases is low and it is
preferred to keep the risk at a bare minimum. The reason is that at the initial phase, businesses
cannot afford such loses, because they pollute the brand image for the business. For instance, a
company ABC who gave a customer goods worth of $500 on the condition that he would pay
them back the due amount within the next thirty days. However, after the appointed term, the
customer comes back and returns the goods after using them saying that he has gone bankrupt. In
such cases, the company cannot do much and is forced to incur the loss on that sale.
Problems such as these are also caused by the businesses overlooking the cash flows of
the business until it’s too late. Although some may argue that the problems and losses should be
delayed for as long as possible. However, incurring a small short term loss is far better than
incurring a large long-term loss. Companies usually have a priority matrix for such actions so
they know which action should be performed at which time interval. The reason for such
management is necessary because businesses assume that if they have a net profit that mean they
are profitable. However, while it may sound counter-intuitive, just because a company is
profitable doesn't mean it can't have a cash flow problem (BlueShore FInancials).