Collections Workflow Explained
A collections workflow is a structured, multi-step process that defines how a company pursues payment on overdue invoices. It specifies what actions to take, when to take them, through which channels, and when to escalate — ensuring every overdue account receives consistent, systematic treatment.
Without a defined workflow, collections is ad-hoc: some accounts get followed up, others are forgotten; some get calls, others only emails; some escalate quickly, others languish for months. A well-designed workflow eliminates these inconsistencies and maximizes recovery.
Modern B2B collections workflows typically combine automated triggers (email reminders on day 1), human or AI-driven outreach (phone calls on day 7), and escalation rules (third-party placement at day 60). The best workflows are designed around the debtor's behavior — responsive debtors get payment plan offers, while non-responsive debtors get faster escalation.
What You Need to Know About Collections Workflows
- Consistency beats intensity. A systematic workflow that contacts every account on schedule outperforms aggressive but inconsistent follow-up. The biggest collection losses come from accounts that simply never get contacted.
- Multi-channel is non-negotiable. Email-only workflows recover 15-25% less than multi-channel (email + phone + payment portal). Phone calls create 4-6x more engagement than emails alone.
- Time-based triggers drive escalation. The best workflows escalate automatically: reminder at day 1, call at day 7, formal demand at day 30, third-party at day 60, legal at day 90. Human judgment is needed at escalation points, not for routine follow-up.
- Segment by debtor behavior, not just age. A debtor who responded and promised to pay needs different treatment than one who has been completely silent. The best workflows branch based on engagement signals.
- Measure and iterate. Track collection rate, average days to collect, and cost per dollar recovered at each workflow stage. Identify where accounts stall and optimize those stages.
Collections Workflow in Practice: B2B Example
Scenario: SaaS Company, 5-Stage Workflow
Stage 1 — Reminder (Day 1-7): Automated email on day 1 post-due. Phone call on day 5. 65% of overdue invoices are resolved in this stage.
Stage 2 — Follow-up (Day 8-30): Weekly calls + emails with increasing urgency. Payment plan offered. 20% of remaining accounts resolve here.
Stage 3 — Formal Demand (Day 31-60): Formal demand letter from the company. Late fees applied. Last chance before external escalation. 8% resolve here.
Stage 4 — External Collection (Day 61-90): Account placed with AI collection agent or third-party. Attorney demand letter sent. 5% resolve here.
Stage 5 — Legal/Write-off (Day 90+): File suit or write off based on cost-benefit analysis. 2% resolve through legal action.
Result: This structured workflow recovers 93% of overdue AR, with 85% resolved in the first 30 days. Without a workflow, the same company recovered only 78% — a $150,000/year difference on $1M in annual AR.
How AgentCollect Automates Your Collections Workflow
A Complete Workflow, Fully Automated
AgentCollect replaces manual collections workflows with AI-powered automation. From the moment an invoice goes past due, AI agents execute the entire workflow: sending reminders, making phone calls, negotiating payment plans, and escalating non-responsive accounts — all without human intervention.
The result is perfect consistency (every account gets the same systematic treatment), maximum speed (contact begins on day 1, not day 30), and complete documentation (every interaction is logged for compliance and legal purposes). Clients typically see 20-30% improvement in recovery rates within the first quarter of deployment.
Related AR Glossary Terms
Collections Workflow FAQ
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