World Wide Property Sales
How to Automate Your Collections
by Tim Randle
Having been a landlord since the early part of 1994, I feel fairly safe in
stating I've tried almost every imaginable way of collecting monthly payments
from my residents. I want to run through some of these methods and let you in on
the pros and cons of each technique. I'll wrap it up by telling you what I do
now.
Personal Collections
Scheduling appointments to pick up payments was never even a consideration for
me as a standard way of doing business. I'm too lazy and I consider it the
resident's responsibility to pay me if they want to stay.
The advantage is that you know right away who's paid and who hasn't. You still
don't know if the check will clear with good funds, assuming you weren't paid in
cash or certified funds.
Of course, I've met with residents to pick up payments on special occasions when
the resident was late or trying to avoid late fees. Again, this is a waste of
time in my opinion.
I now have a designated place for the residents to drop off payments if they
want to go this route.
Also, for chronic late payers, they lose the privilege of paying any other way
than by certified funds at the drop box. Once they've paid consistently and
timely for six months, I'll consider reverting back to the standard pay system
I'll discuss later.
If you do decide to meet your residents to collect, I highly recommend NOT
meeting at your personal residence. Do not allow any of your residents to know
where you live.
In fact, my opinion is that you should have an unlisted telephone number for
your home line and that you should spend as much time as necessary removing
personal information from the various internet directories. Sorry for the
tangent here, but I thought it important enough to include.
I don't recommend this method as it requires too much effort on your part.
The Check's in the Mail
This is probably the way everyone starts out. The payment doesn't arrive and the
resident claims it's In the mail. If it arrives, is it even good? Who knows?
The advantages to this method are that it's very common, and if you have a great
tenant, it can be a low hassle way to collect payments.
The disadvantages include reliance on the resident's memory to write the check,
correctly address the envelope, place the correct postage on it , and actually
drop the payment in the mail. Additionally, you then rely on the postal service
to deliver the payment to the correct address and in a timely manner.
I've even gone as far as providing payment coupons and self-addressed stamped
envelopes to residents to remove some of the risk associated with this
methodology. I didn't find this added effort to produce any noticeable
difference in the results.
I don't recommend this method as it requires too much Involvement from your
resident.
Resident Makes the Deposit
I realize many of you will completely balk at this idea, but I've tried it for
years now with some success. Prior to having a drop box location, I would give
my late payers a bank account number to which they could deposit the monthly
payment directly.
Naturally, I graduated from that step to providing deposit slips that were
pre-printed so the account name and the account number wouldn't be inaccurate.
In this case, this added effort did reduce the monthly "I don't have such and
such information" telephone calls from the residents.
I was never that concerned about a resident attempting to make a withdrawal from
my account, although I'm sure that's a possibility. To decrease this risk, you
could have a separate bank account for deposits and sweep the funds into another
account periodically. Another consideration here is that potentially you could
run into a failed eviction for accepting partial payments. Whether or not a
judge would consider a tenant making a small deposit in a last ditch effort to
avoid eviction "constructive receipt", I'm not able to answer. So far, (knock on
wood), none of the folks I've evicted have tried this angle.
However, what will invariably happen is that residents WILL make partial
payments. The truck broke down, the child custody legal fees, etc. get
prioritized over shelter and what few remaining funds there are end up in your
account. Then you're justify with the fun job of trying to determine who paid
what.
Advantages to this method are that you don't have to make a trip to the bank and
if you have online banking, you know within a day or so if the deposits are
there. Again, you don't know whether or not they paid in pennies or stolen
checks from their neighbor, but you at least see the deposit made.
I don't recommend this method as a standard way of collecting, but perhaps
consider it for the good payer who's just had a bad month.
Print the Checks for Them
(Thanks to Earl B. for the following tip)
I forget when it was, but probably sometime around eighteen months ago, one of
my friendly competitors suggested I try this service. One of his friends was
using it with success so I signed up for it. It's inexpensive and allowed me to
just sit down and print all the monthly payments at one time. I signed all new
residents up on it and bribed some of my existing residents to join.
The service is presented to the residents as an auto draft service and they sign
off on a one-page form that authorizes you to debit their account. The program
itself is a Windows-based software application that allows you to print these
"Demand Drafts".
The advantage is that the payments can be set up as a recurring monthly payment
and you can print them whenever you want. So, rather than waiting for the mail
to arrive, you just sit down at your PC and hit print. The checks roll off your
standardized printer. In other words, you don't need any special equipment. On
the first of each month (or whenever) you just head on over to the bank.
Again, you don't know if the resident has good funds or not, but at least you're
not waiting to make your deposit. One of the disadvantages is that you will have
to purchase check stock, but I believe I received 300 checks with my initial
purchase.
Another advantage to using this software is that you could set up your own bills
on this so that each month you just print out your recurring bills or a set of
blank checks with your pre-printed information. You can find out more about this
software by clicking on the url below. Please ignore the cheesy web site and
examine the features and benefits for yourself.
Checkman
I no longer use this method, but can recommend it as it worked well for me.
Direct Deposit
For the last year I've been using a new service I found. I searched high and low
for a reliable, quality direct deposit service that wasn't designed for the huge
apartment complexes. Everything I stumbled upon had a fee structure that priced
it way out of my league.
Again, as before with the CheckMan application, I signed all my new residents up
on it (company policy, don't you know?) and bribed some of my existing residents
to join as well. I think it's fantastic.
Residents receive an email notifying them of the coming draft and it all runs
through the banks Automated Clearing House systems (ACH), so there's absolutely
nothing that I have to do.
The resident's account gets debited automatically on the designated day and I
receive an email the next day that shows me which accounts were drafted
successfully, and which failed, if any. Three days after that, the funds are
automatically deposited into my account.
The residents know it's coming and since it's automatic like other bank drafts,
it requires no effort on their part. It also requires no effort on my part. It's
the simplest solution that I've found and very affordable to boot.
Rather than go into all the features and benefits here, I'll just give you a
link so you can read about it at your own convenience.
Clear Now
I also got them to agree to offer a trial period. If you sign up through the
link above, they will give you two full months to try the service at absolutely
no cost. I know that if you give them a try, you'll be hooked.
Bio:
Tim Randle bought his first investment property in 1994 and he is a full-time
investor in Round Rock, Texas. He licenses his web site, www.QuickOffers.com, to
other real estate investors who need a turnkey web site to use in their own
investing business. He also owns and operates www.REIClub.com, an online
resource for creative real estate investors.
Tim's informative articles on real estate investing have been published in
Creative Real Estate Magazine as well as the Mr. Landlord Newsletter and his
counsel is frequently sought by investors around the country.