If you’re a business owner or departmental manager who does any kind of collections activities, you’re already pursuing first party collections, though you may not have known it. First party collections means precisely that: attempting to collect on debt for your own company instead of sending your accounts to a third party agency. Any time you make a call asking to remit payment or send a past due notice you’re engaging in the practice of first party collections.
“First party” literally means that you were the first party in the original exchange of goods or services for money, i.e. the lender. The person who accepted the goods or services and promised to pay, i.e. the debtor, is the “second party.” If an outside collection agency becomes involved, they were not part of the original transaction, which is why they’re called “third party.”
First party collections are most common early in the debt collection cycle. As soon as your regular accounts receivable staff become aware that a bill is past due, they can pass it on to first party collections without a time lag. First party collections people are often more cognizant of the need to attempt to keep on good terms with the debtor in order to get more potential business in the future.
Often the debtor will be more inclined to try to please their original creditor, especially if you have a product or service that he or she needs in order to maintain their business. Sometimes a gentle reminder that you won’t ship any more items until their past due amount is cleared up is enough to get recalcitrant debtors to pay.
Another difference is that unlike third party agencies, first party collections do not fall under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. When you are the original party or a legal affiliate of it like a subsidiary, you are considered a lender rather than a collector. Third party agencies therefore do not have as much wiggle room in their practices as first party collections entities due, but the latter are still subject to state and federal law.
Once a bill gets past due beyond 2-3 months, though, it’s usually time to turn it over to a third party agency or sell the debt. The ability to collect on past due amounts drops steeply after this time statistically, so rather than continuing collections actions in vain, you’re better off handing them over to professionals with more resources.
The most successful first party collections are done by dedicated collections professionals. Salespeople, accounting staff and business owners just aren’t as capable at collections because their attentions are scattered and collections is one of the least pleasant tasks they have to do.
If you hire an individual or create a department to handle first party collections, however, they can be just as successful as third party collections. If they are knowledgeable in modern collection techniques like private investigation to track down new addresses and phone numbers, offering incentives to get the debtor to call in or working out settlements, first party efforts can be remarkably efficient. When trying to make the decision of which type of collections instruments to use, keep in mind whether you’re spreading your resources too thin or if you have the team in place to do first party collections.
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