Invoicing Solutions by Banks for SME Credit Clients
By: Amit Bhushan Date: 24th Dec. 2015
Lately, the banks have started to consider e-Invoicing solutions to their Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) clients. To utter surprise, such services are being offered free besides banks making herculean effort so that their SME clients adopt such solutions. The benefit bank customer gains is usually on the collection side, wherein their debtors gain an opportunity to make payments against such e-invoices at any on the network branch via Cash or cheque or even credit the bank account electronically.
The bank application also supports in triggering alert notifications electronically to remind in case of delay, penalties triggers or early payment discounts, if any. To SME customer, usually short of manpower, it serves well by reducing some load and also making summary of information of delayed payment invoices as well as total outstanding on each debtor, available on his net-banking dashboard.
If such customers are also receiving invoices electronically, they know their payables which may be due and thus know where they need to focus externally.For the banks, such applications reveal additional data points for the credit scoring besides opportunity to expand services especially for their wholesale trading, manufacturing and select service sector- client segments.
The technologies such as big data, analytics etc, may allow bank to further capitalize on such offerings to create additional value added services. Even in the current form banks are gaining deeper insights into customers operations besides data points around the chain of entities, their client may be involved with as well as insights into behaviour. This allows bank to be better positioned to sell its services into such value chains by targeting suitable products. Greater adoption of such services by clients may allow banks to further liberalize credit availability for the SME segment, which finds itself perennially short of credit, in order to fulfil the opportunity set in the market.
This is because banks usually rely on balance sheet + collateral information while calculating the need for credit and overall business environment of client, seasonal variation, growth trends etc. are rarely evaluated due to unreliability of data. The push for making bank finance available to SMEs is usually done at the behest of some government agency being available to underwrite such credit whereas banks on their own making little additional effort to gain additional insights or data points to create a positive bias for such credit.
It's high time that banks realize that over reliance on corporate segment alone has its own risk concentration dimension besides encouraging stickiness to older traditional customers/technologies/mindsets and devise ways wherein they can spread their risk a bit better and evolve clients in emerging sunrise sectors and new client segments.
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By: Amit Bhushan Date: 24th Dec. 2015
Lately, the banks have started to consider e-Invoicing solutions to their Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) clients. To utter surprise, such services are being offered free besides banks making herculean effort so that their SME clients adopt such solutions. The benefit bank customer gains is usually on the collection side, wherein their debtors gain an opportunity to make payments against such e-invoices at any on the network branch via Cash or cheque or even credit the bank account electronically.
The bank application also supports in triggering alert notifications electronically to remind in case of delay, penalties triggers or early payment discounts, if any. To SME customer, usually short of manpower, it serves well by reducing some load and also making summary of information of delayed payment invoices as well as total outstanding on each debtor, available on his net-banking dashboard.
If such customers are also receiving invoices electronically, they know their payables which may be due and thus know where they need to focus externally.For the banks, such applications reveal additional data points for the credit scoring besides opportunity to expand services especially for their wholesale trading, manufacturing and select service sector- client segments.
The technologies such as big data, analytics etc, may allow bank to further capitalize on such offerings to create additional value added services. Even in the current form banks are gaining deeper insights into customers operations besides data points around the chain of entities, their client may be involved with as well as insights into behaviour. This allows bank to be better positioned to sell its services into such value chains by targeting suitable products. Greater adoption of such services by clients may allow banks to further liberalize credit availability for the SME segment, which finds itself perennially short of credit, in order to fulfil the opportunity set in the market.
This is because banks usually rely on balance sheet + collateral information while calculating the need for credit and overall business environment of client, seasonal variation, growth trends etc. are rarely evaluated due to unreliability of data. The push for making bank finance available to SMEs is usually done at the behest of some government agency being available to underwrite such credit whereas banks on their own making little additional effort to gain additional insights or data points to create a positive bias for such credit.
It's high time that banks realize that over reliance on corporate segment alone has its own risk concentration dimension besides encouraging stickiness to older traditional customers/technologies/mindsets and devise ways wherein they can spread their risk a bit better and evolve clients in emerging sunrise sectors and new client segments.
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