Is Payment Flexibility Hurting Your Business In Ways You Didn’t Know?

This article was originally published on Forbes. You can read the original version here.

In my years working with B2B companies, I’ve seen the push to offer flexible payment terms (like monthly options for SaaS or 60-90-day cycles for enterprise contracts) to close deals faster. While it seems like a win-win—clients appreciate the flexibility, and sales teams close more contracts—without proper management, it can quietly drain resources and disrupt operations.

Payments come in slowly, cash flow tightens, and unpaid invoices start piling up—leaving finance teams scrambling with collections and increasing financial risk. 

And, with increasing preference for pay-over-time options, it becomes imperative to figure out ways to offer payment flexibility without hurting your business.

Five Ways Payment Flexibility Can Hurt Your Business

While appealing, payment flexibility can incur hidden costs associated with delayed payments, such as write-offs from bad debt and increased back-office work to track collections. 

Here are five ways it can quietly hurt your business:

Strained Cash Flow

When businesses offer flexible payment terms, they use their cash to finance customer purchases. This increases liabilities on the balance sheet but reduces actual cash flow, creating a liquidity gap.

Without cash coming in quickly, it can become tough to fund everyday operations or invest in growth. For smaller companies, this strain can quickly lead to financial stress, leaving them vulnerable to unexpected costs.

Rising Risks Of Churn, Payment Delays, And Defaults

Are you a bank? Do you have the tools to assess customer risk and predict churn? Most companies don’t. Without the ability to evaluate creditworthiness upfront, businesses often onboard high-risk clients who are likely to delay payments, switch to a competitor, or default.

This leads to mounting bad debt and erratic cash flow, creating instability, especially for businesses with high-ticket sales or long payment cycles.

Operational Complexity In Managing Flexible Payments

Managing flexible payments without integrated systems adds operational strain, particularly in billing and account oversight. Finance teams must manually monitor invoices, follow varied schedules, and chase late payments. Sales and customer success teams lack visibility into payment statuses, leaving them in the dark about upsells, cross-sells, or renewals. 

This fragmented approach increases costs and inefficiencies as teams work independently to manage accounts.

Lack Of Visibility For Deal Prioritization

When sales teams lack a clear view of payment reliability or account status, they can struggle to prioritize the right deals. Time and resources are wasted on high-risk leads while better opportunities slip through the cracks. This lack of focus can cost businesses in missed revenue and growth.

Pressure On Margins

Managing payment flexibility in-house extends payment terms, increasing days sales outstanding (DSO) and tying up cash flow. Higher DSO reduces available cash, making reinvestment difficult. For smaller deals, delayed payments quickly erode profit margins, limiting resources for responding to market fluctuations.

These pitfalls set the stage for finding solutions that can help overcome them.

Overcoming Payment Flexibility Challenges

Whether exploring underwriting technology or considering business partnerships to minimize risks, every solution requires careful evaluation.

AI-Powered Payment Automation

Leveraging AI to automate payment processes such as invoice generation, customized payment term creation, and reconciliation can help reduce operational strain. AI can predict late payments using historical data, allowing businesses to take proactive measures such as sending reminders or making adjustments. It also flags suspicious payment activities or discrepancies, thereby reducing the risk of fraud.

However, AI automation does not provide upfront capital, which means liquidity gaps may remain unaddressed. Implementing AI solutions also requires technical expertise and resources, which can pose challenges for some businesses.

B2B BNPL Partnerships

A B2B BNPL partner empowers businesses to offer payment flexibility while offering them upfront capital and offloading risk. The enablers handle underwriting, collections, and payment schedules, enabling companies to close more deals without cash flow issues or bad debt.

It's no wonder the B2B BNPL market has hit $14 billion. However, to better evaluate this option, let’s do some number crunching. 

Take a typical $12,000 SaaS contract. Without a BNPL partner, heavy discounts—up to 25%—can reduce the sale price to $9,000. With 300 deals and a 20% conversion rate, this yields $576,000 in gross revenue. After 5% write-offs and 2% admin costs, net revenue falls to $535,680.

With a BNPL partner, you can cut discounts to 10%, keeping the sale price at $10,800. Flexible terms increase conversion to 25%, bringing gross revenue to $810,000. After almost zero write-offs and financing(6%) plus partner fees (6%), net revenue rises to $712,800—a 30% revenue boost.

While partnering brings many benefits, such as higher revenue, upfront capital, zero risk, and reduced operational burden, the partner fee might seem high. Moreover, picking the wrong partner can lead to cash flow issues or messy collections.

Effective Accounts Receivable (AR) Strategy

An effective AR strategy involves several key steps. It begins with classifying clients based on their payment behavior and financial health. Once classified, tailored payment terms can be assigned to each client, enabling the detection of at-risk accounts. For delinquent clients, stricter terms are enforced to help maintain financial stability.

This approach ensures a steady cash flow by minimizing overdue payments and reduces the risk of bad debt through proactive monitoring and segmentation. Additionally, it strengthens customer relationships by fostering clear communication and offering tailored payment plans.

However, without automation, managing AR processes can overwhelm teams as a business scales. Furthermore, offering flexible payment terms may delay revenue, which can strain cash flow during periods of high growth.

While each of these solutions offers a way forward, it's also important to look at whether you should build these systems in-house or partner with an expert. 

Build Or Buy? A Look At Payment Flexibility Success

Deciding whether to build payment flexibility systems in-house or to partner with established providers is a critical choice that depends on a business's unique goals and resources.

Building such systems internally may initially appear cost-effective, offering full control over processes like underwriting, collections, integrations, and risk management. However, these highly complex areas demand specialized expertise and significant time for effective implementation. Additionally, financing customers from your own balance sheet can strain resources, while negotiating credit facilities often involves lengthy and intricate processes. For some businesses, these challenges may hinder growth and limit scalability.

On the other hand, partnering with experienced providers can offer a streamlined alternative. For instance, Amazon’s collaboration with Affirm to offer BNPL solutions demonstrates how outsourcing can enable a company to focus on its core growth strategies while leveraging a partner’s expertise in payment flexibility.

However, partnerships also come with considerations. Relying on third-party providers means ceding some control and may introduce additional costs or dependencies. Businesses must weigh the trade-offs between in-house development and partnerships to ensure their approach to payment flexibility aligns with their broader objectives.

By evaluating both paths carefully, businesses can identify a strategy that transforms payment flexibility into a competitive advantage without overlooking potential risks.

If you choose to take the B2B BNPL partnership approach, Ratio Boost is an excellent B2B BNPL solution and Ratio makes a great partner, let’s see why!

Why Ratio Boost Is Your Perfect B2B BNPL Partner

With Ratio Boost, you no longer have to choose between offering payment flexibility and maintaining financial stability. Backed by a $411 million funding pool, Ratio enables you to let customers pay on their terms—monthly, quarterly, or whatever fits their budgets—while ensuring you get paid upfront. This means your cash flow stays predictable, empowering you to reinvest in growth immediately.

What sets Ratio apart is its AI-powered underwriting system, which evaluates every customer’s creditworthiness and payment reliability before a deal is finalized. 

By analyzing financial health, transaction patterns, and payment histories, Ratio ensures you offer payment flexibility only to clients with minimum risk. This proactive risk management not only minimizes defaults and late payments but also gives you the confidence to close deals faster and focus on scaling your business.

Ratio Boost also transforms how you manage accounts receivable. 

Manual invoicing, chasing overdue payments, and inefficient workflows are a thing of the past. Ratio automates invoicing, reminders, and collections, all while continuously monitoring client behavior to flag potential risks early. Imagine a platform that adjusts terms proactively to protect your cash flow before issues arise—that’s exactly what Ratio Boost delivers.

Here’s an example of the impact Ratio Boost can have. A Fleet Management SaaS provider sought to expand into smaller logistics markets but struggled to offer flexible payment terms without jeopardizing their cash flow. With Ratio Boost, they provided their customers with affordable terms while being paid upfront themselves.

The outcome? 👇

So, why wait? Request a demo of Ratio Boost now, and let us show you how we can help you confidently unlock sustainable growth.

Tags:
BNPL
SaaS
published on
January 14, 2025
Author
Ashish Srimal
Co-founder & CEO at Ratio
Ashish Srimal is a SaaS entrepreneur and executive who has built SaaS startups and led large SaaS businesses.
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