Creating Compliant Professional Invoices
Learn what elements your invoices must include to comply with Hong Kong regulations…
Read MoreImprove your cash flow, reduce bad debt, and build collection processes that scale. Proven strategies from Hong Kong businesses that actually work.
You’ve got a great product. Your customers love what you do. But they’re slow to pay, and suddenly your cash flow’s tight. Sound familiar?
That’s the reality for most growing SMEs in Hong Kong. You’re managing growth, hiring staff, buying inventory — and your working capital gets stretched. Late payments from clients add up quickly. We’re talking weeks or months of cash sitting in unpaid invoices instead of in your bank account.
The good news? You don’t need a massive finance team to fix this. We’ve seen businesses turn things around with structured collection processes, clear payment terms, and consistent follow-up. These aren’t complicated tactics — they’re just done well and done consistently.
Here’s what we see happen: businesses don’t actually discuss payment terms with clients before starting work. They assume 30 days. The client assumes 60 days. Then when the invoice lands, there’s confusion.
Fix this by being explicit from day one. Your contract or proposal should state: “Net 30” or “50% upfront, 50% on delivery” — whatever works for your business. Don’t bury it in small print. Put it somewhere visible. Most clients will respect clear terms because it shows you’re organized.
For high-risk clients — new businesses, unfamiliar industries, or large orders — consider requiring a deposit. 20-30% upfront covers your costs if things go sideways. It also signals to the client that you’re serious about the project.
You can’t manage what you don’t track. Most growing SMEs use a spreadsheet — which works, but it’s fragile. Someone forgets to update it, and suddenly you don’t know who owes you what.
You need a system that shows: invoice date, due date, amount, client name, payment status, and days overdue. When a payment’s 5 days late, you know it. When it hits 15 days, you’ve got a clear trigger to follow up.
This doesn’t have to be fancy. A spreadsheet with conditional formatting (overdue invoices turn red) works fine if you update it weekly. But honestly, even basic accounting software like Xero or Wave handles this automatically. You’ll spend maybe 2-3 hours setting it up, and then it runs itself.
This is where most businesses drop the ball. They invoice you, then wait passively for payment. Days pass. Then weeks. By the time they follow up, the invoice is 45 days overdue and it feels awkward.
Instead, build a simple follow-up schedule. Send a payment reminder email 3 days before the due date. Most clients appreciate the heads-up — they’ll make sure it gets processed. If it’s still unpaid 5 days after the due date, send a friendly follow-up: “Just checking in on invoice #2024-1847. Let me know if you need any clarification.”
Keep it professional but conversational. Don’t make it accusatory. Many delays are genuinely administrative — the invoice got lost, it’s in the approval queue, someone’s on holiday. A simple check-in often gets things moving.
If it hits 20 days overdue, escalate. Pick up the phone. Don’t email. A quick conversation often reveals the real issue. Maybe their cash is tight. Maybe they’re disputing something. You won’t know until you ask.
As you grow, you need consistent policies. What happens when someone doesn’t pay? When do you stop work? When do you involve a debt collector?
Document your approach. Here’s a sample escalation:
Day 5 overdue: Friendly email reminder
Day 15 overdue: Phone call to clarify any issues
Day 30 overdue: Formal letter (email or physical) with payment deadline
Day 45+ overdue: Stop work. Consider legal action or debt collection
Being clear about consequences also helps. Many clients will prioritize payment when they know work stops at day 45. You’re not being harsh — you’re being professional and protecting your business.
This article provides educational information about cash collection practices and payment management. It’s not legal or financial advice specific to your situation. Cash collection laws vary by jurisdiction, and Hong Kong has specific regulations around debt recovery and credit practices. Before implementing collection procedures, especially formal legal action, consult with a qualified lawyer familiar with Hong Kong commercial law. Individual circumstances differ, and what works for one business may not suit another.
Good cash collection isn’t complicated. It’s just consistent. You’re doing three things: being clear about payment terms upfront, tracking what’s owed and when, and following up systematically before things get difficult.
Start with one change. Maybe it’s adding payment terms to your next contract. Or setting up a simple tracking spreadsheet. Or scheduling one follow-up call this week. Small changes add up.
Most Hong Kong SMEs we’ve seen improve their cash position by 20-30% just by doing these basics properly. Your cash flow will thank you.