What Is Invoice Factoring
What Is Invoice Factoring?
Invoice factoring is the purchase of accounts receivable for immediate cash. Invoice factoring gives businesses the power to ensure growth without diluting equity or incurring debt. After invoices are submitted and verified, they are funded by Ark Capital within 24 hours.
Your business needs working capital in order to take on new business, grow your business or manage everyday expenses. It’s tough to build your business when you’re waiting on your customers to pay for 30, 60 or 90 days.
Ark Capital Funding allows you to get paid right away. Instead of waiting for idle invoices to get paid, send them to Ark Capital to get paid right away. Once we buy your invoices, we become your accounts receivable department.
Take control of your cash flow with invoice factoring with Ark Capital Funding.
Our Process
Step 1: Apply
Complete form &
become an Ark Client
Step 2: Service
You deliver your
products or services
Step 3: Send
Send your invoices to
Ark Capital Funding
Step 4: Get Paid
Ark Capital verifies &
pays you within 24 hours
How Invoice Factoring Can Benefit Your Company
Now that we have answered what is invoice factoring, discover the benefits of factoring invoices with Ark Capital Funding really boil down to adding profit to your bottom line. Before you factor, make sure you can take advantage of the features of invoice factoring and leverage them into value:
- Improving or increasing marketing
- Saying “yes” to customers who demand credit terms
- Investing in income-producing assets–people and equipment
- Eliminating supplier constraints
- Shifting manpower from collection to marketing and production
Many of our invoice factoring clients actually reduce expenses by outsourcing credit and administration to Ark Capital, and by leveraging their healthy cash position. The most common ways include:
- Eliminating bad debt with Ark Capital’s credit guarantee
- Reducing collection and administrative expenses
- Receiving cash discounts from suppliers
- Staying current with suppliers and creditors
- Establishing payment terms with suppliers, further improving cash flow
- Meeting regular payroll obligations
- Bringing payroll taxes current