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Collecting Past Due Accounts - Please Make Me Pay This Bill!

Editor: The following article is offered for free use in your ezine, print publication or on your web site, provided the author information at the end is also included. Notification of use would be appreciated but it not necessary. Additional articles on debt collection subjects can be found at: www.iare.com/d_debt.htm

COLLECTING PAST DUE ACCOUNTS =96 Please, Please Make Me Pay This Bill! By Jim Finucan =A9 2005 Tiare Publications 472 words

If you listen "between the lines" you can sometimes hear a debtor saying this. It's a cry for help you're hearing, even though they may not be saying it in so many words. In fact, they might be saying something completely irresponsible. It's as if they hate themselves Offering some phony excuse. The more carefully you listen for this hidden message the more easily you can spot it.

Reflecting this back to the debtor can have a very powerful effect. Often it will soften even those who are the most hostile and make them ready to listen to a solution you offer, perhaps even making them agree to sending the balance in full.

Listen for those times when a debtor indicates he really wants you to collect but doesn't come right out and say so. He may give you what sounds like another whining excuse but you may be able to hear the hidden cry for help. He's caught up in a thought pattern that encourages complacency and inactivity.

Sometimes the debtor may even come across as trying to apologize, trying to tell you how sorry he is about the delinquency. The debtor feels bad because he knows he has the capacity to pay but he just doesn't want to part with the money. Your reaction should be to ask the debtor how badly he really feels. He needs your help to get over this hurdle.

This is the time to bring your skills into play, restore the debtor's self esteem and give him hope.

"OK, Mr. Jones. You own your own home and you've been making payments on this diligently. You could refinance your home, pay off this bill and any others you may have and be done with it."

The debtor may respond by saying something like:

"I don't want to refinance. I could lose my house."

"Not at all, Mr. Jones. Many people refinance when mortgage rates drop. When interest rates go down more of your money goes to paying down the principal. Your monthly payment could even drop. Besides, if your wages are garnished and you lose 25% of your income would you still be able to make all those payments? What would the bank say if you should decide to refinance after someone has had to take a judgment on you."

Or, the debtor might come at you with:

"Quit calling me, damn it! I don't have the money right now. I'd pay it but you can't get blood out of a turnip."

"Mr. Jones, a turnip doesn't have a job that gives it a paycheck every Friday. Now, you said you'd pay it if you could. Do you really mean that or were those just empty words?

Now shift the call into talking about how he is, in fact, able to pay and the assets he has.

(End)

Let 15-year collections pro Jim Finucan show you how to double =96 even triple-- the amount of money you collect from your accounts receivable. Check out his unique collections manual "Past Due!" It shows you how to turn their excuses to your advantage! For more information visit: www.tiare.com/pastdue.htm

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