These topics, amongst others, will be covered in the webinar
Why you shouldn't miss this webinar
Many organizations want to finance growth and innovation using their own cash flow, but at the same time tie up unnecessary working capital in outstanding accounts. Invoices are paid late, disputes pile up, and follow-up procedures often remain too generic.
In this webinar, youโll learn why this approach is becoming increasingly unsustainable. Experts from Altares Dun & Bradstreet and MaxCredible will demonstrate how credit management is evolving from reactive monitoring to predictive management of risk, cash flow, and payment behavior.
Not some abstract discussion about digitalization. Instead, a practical conversation about:
โข Why DSO delays often stem from errors in your own process
โข How external business data helps to better assess risks, payment behavior, and priorities
โข How to use segmentation and monitoring to follow up faster and more effectively
โข How to systematically identify disputes, incorrect contact information, and process leaks
โข What e-invoicing and AI Mean for the Future of Credit Management
The bottom line is clear: without reliable data, proper documentation, and smart follow-up, accounts receivable management remains unnecessarily manual, reactive, and prone to errors.
Who is this episode intended for?
This episode is valuable for procurement professionals who are responsible for:
โข Credit management and accounts receivable management
โข Collections and order-to-cash processes
โข Cash flow forecasting and working capital optimization
โข Data quality, segmentation, and process improvement in finance
Professionals who want to:
โข Identify risks earlier in their client portfolio
โข Systematically reduce disputes and procedural errors
โข Gain better control over cash flow and predictability
โข Laying a stronger foundation for AI or automation (or a combination of both)
Would you like to know how this could impact your order-to-cash process? Contact Altares Dun & Bradstreet or MaxCredible to schedule an exploratory meeting.