Once you’ve decided on delegating your delinquent accounts to a collection agency, the next question is how to find the best one. In today’s current economy there are so many different kinds it can be confusing. Following are suggestions for finding the best collection agency to suit your needs.
Collection agencies use two kinds of fee structures. Some of them send you a bill each month, while others take their money out of the funds they recover for you. The latter is clearly preferable, because it doesn’t cost you money upfront and it shows you that they have confidence in their ability to collect. There’s really no reason to pay fees up front to a collection agency when so many of them don’t require it.
Your next question should be if they are members of one of the two professional societies for collections people: the American Collectors Association or the Commercial Law League of America. Membership in these associations indicates a commitment to professional service.
Both professional collection societies insist on professional trade practices. This means not just the minimum (conforming to Fair Debt Collection Practices requirements) but also continuing education so their members understand the latest and best techniques in debt collection. Debt collection practices have changed radically over just the past couple of years so you don’t want to hire someone who’s behind the times.
The next question for a collection agency you want to hire is whether or not they will allow you to access your accounts online. Even though you’re delegating collections to them, you want to be able to check your files to see how things are going at any time. A truly professional agency will understand this need and take care of it for you rather than making you rely on monthly reports.
An important way to keep an eye on your collections files when they’ve been outsourced is online access, so one of the most important criteria for choosing a collection agency is whether or not they offer you online access to your accounts. You want to be able to check on their progress at all times, so agencies that do this are better than agencies who only offer you reports periodically in the mail.
Another criteria for picking a collection agency is whether or not they do their own collections or send out files to other agencies. Those who send out files to other agencies often use offshore call centers, which are mentally easier to dismiss to debtors. In addition, whether or not the contracted third parties are offshore, you have no control over their professionalism. For this reason, you should pick an agency that does all their own collections work and you won’t be sorry.
The final thing you should check on when hiring a collection agency is what their business hours are. This may seem like a small thing but with national collections, time zones can be a problem, and with local collections, you still want people working outside of normal business hours. Consumer debtors are more likely to answer the phone before 9 am or after 5 pm, because they’re more likely to be home, and also because they believe collections calls are less likely at those times. A collection agency which spreads out its work hours is beneficial to you.
