How To Get Paid Faster from Home Depot

Home Depot is a great company – but let’s face it, they do what a lot of big businesses do: They pay kind of slow. I know this because I have clients who do business with them. Typical terms are around 60 days. These terms are not uncommon when dealing with larger companies. And yet, it’s a huge issue for smaller companies.

That’s because smaller companies need cash. By the time one of my clients sells product to Home Depot or a larger company all of their money has been spent on buying the raw materials, producing the product, paying people, maintaining overhead and shipping the items…and then it’s another 60 days until the cash comes in. Big businesses have greater cash reserves and large credit facilities made available by banks who are more than happy to lend them money. Small companies don’t have these resources at their disposal. They just wait.

Until now. There is an enormous change happening in payments processing, a change that will impact any small business doing business with larger companies. Technology is driving this change and a company named Taulia is right in the middle of it. Taulia, founded by former entrepreneurs who wrote payment processing software for SAP, raised about $15 million in additional financing last January and is now valued at close to $1 billion – and there are rumors that they’re considering a public offering in 2016.

“This company makes a lot of sense,” says Josh Hannah of Matrix Partners, one of Taulia’s earliest investors and a board member. “I love companies that find legacy-related inefficiencies that have persisted for years then make them efficient.”

How is Taulia solving these problems? Take Home Depot (or John Deere, EBay, Grainger, Salesforce, PayPal, Coca-Cola Bottling Consolidated, Hallmark Cards, Johnson Controls, Graphic Packaging, Pacific Gas & Electric – all customers, according to the company). You’re a small company selling product or providing services to one of these giants. You ship your product/do your service, send your invoice…and wait to get paid. Meanwhile, other bills need to be paid. Your bank is offering you less credit (if any credit at all). Factoring and micro-finance options are expensive. You’re trying to grow but you’re restricted. You need the cash now.

But what if Home Depot comes back to you and says “Look little guy – we value you and we’re happy to pay you earlier. Just find your invoice in our online portal and click the button that says ‘pay earlier.’ It’s as simple as that.” And it really is that simple. Taulia’s software is written to integrate with their customers’ back end systems. A portal is provided to the small business suppliers, either by Taulia or from the large company. If a small supplier chooses to be paid earlier the payment will be made, net of a discount. The discount is ultimately split between the big company and Taulia. I’m simplifying a few things here, but you get the point.

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Amazon Launches a New ‘Kickstarter’ Marketplace

Need some new shoes with images of limes on them but not sure where to look? Amazon has you covered.

The Seattle company’s e-commerce site already sells pretty much any commodity you could want, but Amazon’s new marketplace branches beyond the ordinary household items and electronics.

Amazon Exclusives, which launched Wednesday, will sell new products from “up-and-coming” companies, that have done well in pitch competitions or crowdfunding campaigns on Kickstarter or other sites.

Amazon customers have been expecting something like the new marketplace since job postings surfaced in January.

Some of the products were featured on the reality TV show “Shark Tank” and many others have won industry innovation awards, according to an Amazon press release.

“Our mission on behalf of customers is to make Amazon the destination for brands and innovators to launch and sell their products, providing our customers early access to new products,” Peter Faricy, VP of Amazon Marketplace, said in a statement. “We understand that helping brands gain exposure for their award-winning new products is beneficial to customers that desire to be the first to have the hot new item.”

The new program is also beneficial to Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN).

Amazon will hold exclusive third-party rights to the products on the site, meaning the companies can sell the items on their own sites but not on any other outside site or in outside physical stores.

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