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Collections in the MJ Biz: How to Collect Without Disrupting Relationships

Cody Ziering & Brett Gelfand


“We are owed $50,000 by one of the largest retailers in the state, but we don’t want to ruin our relationship with them by demanding our money back! What can we do?”


Cannabis businesses experience cash flow hurdles for a variety of reasons, a problem further compounded by the ever-changing legal environment alongside some larger-than-life personalities found within today’s blossoming green rush.

“We are owed $50,000 by one of the largest retailers in the state, but we don’t want to ruin our relationship with them!” As collection experts, we are approached constantly with similar examples of clients worried to collect the cash they are yet to be paid.

Collecting on past-due receivables is never an easy internal project, either:

  1. You delegate collection calls to a capable staff member with time available
  2. Your sales team attempts to collect the cash themselves
  3. You use an inside A/R representative to handle collection calls

Most growing businesses in the cannabis industry do not have the size, resources or infrastructure to hire full-time Accounts Receivable personnel. These businesses typically do not have employees with the free time to make dial after dial after dial to convince a customer to pay their outstanding bill. The worst case, which we’ve seen countless times, are salespeople spending their days and skills trying to sell a client on writing a check to pay for previous orders, rather than purchasing new ones. This puts your salespeople in a precarious situation. After building a sensitive business relationship, they must now go to their clients, and become the “bad guy bill-collector”. More over, all of these actions waste productive business hours that could be better spent doing more important tasks, most specifically taking actions that generate revenue for the business.

As there are “plenty of fish in the sea”, it is important to do business with companies that you can trust. It is important to understand how to effectively communicate with past-due customers. It is important to recoup your cash, quickly, to be able to use it to reinvest and scale your operation.

By outsourcing your business’s past due receivables with a collection agency, they professionally communicate with debtors to recoup lost revenue quickly, and more importantly ensure a lasting relationship with your customers long term. If debtors do not comply, agencies do their best to advise their clients if money owed is more valuable than a soured relationship.

Many collection agencies offer their services on a contingent basis. When most attorneys require a retainer fee and charge ridiculous hourly rates (sometimes exceeding $900/hour), contingent collection agencies charge nothing. They instead make a percentage of what they collect for you after you get paid. While it is possible that you could save using an attorney, it is unlikely. Collection agencies are businesses designed for one purpose, to recover their client’s past due Accounts Receivables.

Good collection agencies offer their clients different collection strategies with different levels of aggressiveness. This should be based on what their client deems more valuable; the cash or the relationship. Collection agencies allow your business to maintain a solid relationship, while the agency plays “A/R Manager” or even “the bad guy” if need be. Hopefully this information helps your business decide which option is most desirable.

Brett Gelfand and Cody Ziering

Brett Gelfand and Cody Ziering

Brett Gelfand and Cody Ziering are the founders and managing parters of CannaBIZ Collects LLC. Previously, Gelfand and Ziering together, helped build a Colorado cannabis wholesale operation from the ground up, including an indoor cultivation, edible kitchen, extract lab, and dispensary. During their tenure in Colorado, both executives recognized the burden cannabis companies were experiencing when releasing credit terms to other cannabis firms. Brett’s father, Attorney Ross Gelfand, joined the CBC team, and together the three started CannaBIZ Collects. Ross has over 30+ years of commercial collection experience and sold his collection agency and law practice in 2012. Brett and Cody convinced Ross to focus his attention on the growing credit and collection trend in the cannabis space.

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