Financial Operations · Everett, Washington
Accounts Receivable Management for Contractors in Everett, Washington
Money owed is money at risk. We manage the accounts receivable process so you know exactly what's outstanding, what's overdue, and when it's coming in.
Everett · WA · Accounts Receivable Management Market
Industrial trades work in Everett often involves larger project scopes with longer billing cycles than residential service work. Job costing by project phase, accounts receivable management that handles commercial billing timelines, and financial reporting that separates industrial from residential margin give you the financial clarity to manage both correctly. See the Accounts Receivable Management overview and trades support in Everett.
What accounts receivable management means for a trades business.
Accounts receivable management for a trades business means tracking every outstanding invoice from the moment it's generated to the moment payment is received, and actively managing the collection process for anything that goes past due. For businesses doing $3M or more, the A/R balance at any point can represent weeks of revenue. Letting it drift creates real cash flow risk. We serve HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and roofing contractors across the Pacific Northwest.
Most trades businesses manage A/R reactively, which means they collect when customers pay and chase when it gets bad enough that someone notices. A managed A/R process runs proactively with defined follow-up schedules, escalation protocols, and regular reporting. ---
- Clear processes your team can follow without the owner in every task
- Systems connected so data flows without manual entry
- Margin visibility before problems compound at month-end
- Accountability structures that hold as the business grows
- Less time spent fighting software and more time running the operation
- Infrastructure that supports growth instead of constraining it
What accounts receivable management means for a trades business.
Accounts receivable management for a trades business means tracking every outstanding invoice from the moment it's generated to the moment payment is received, and actively managing the collection process for anything that goes past due. For businesses doing $3M or more, the A/R balance at any point can represent weeks of revenue. Letting it drift creates real cash flow risk. We serve HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and roofing contractors across the Pacific Northwest.
Most trades businesses manage A/R reactively, which means they collect when customers pay and chase when it gets bad enough that someone notices. A managed A/R process runs proactively with defined follow-up schedules, escalation protocols, and regular reporting. ---
- Clear processes your team can follow without the owner in every task
- Systems connected so data flows without manual entry
- Margin visibility before problems compound at month-end
- Accountability structures that hold as the business grows
- Less time spent fighting software and more time running the operation
- Infrastructure that supports growth instead of constraining it
Who needs this.
- HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and roofing contractors doing $2M to $8M in revenue
- Owners whose back office has not kept pace with crew and revenue growth
- Businesses where critical work still routes through the owner's phone
- Teams using capable software that is misconfigured or disconnected
- Contractors preparing to scale without adding proportional administrative headcount
Without accounts receivable management for contractors
- Nobody knows the true A/R balance without pulling a report and waiting for it
- Collections calls happen when cash gets tight, not on a consistent follow-up schedule
- Long-outstanding invoices get the same attention as recent ones with no triage
- Disputed invoices sit unresolved because nobody owns the follow-up
- Month-end cash surprises happen because receivables aren't managed proactively
With Sentric managing accounts receivable management
- A/R aging is part of the weekly review and visible without running a manual report
- Collections follow a consistent schedule based on invoice age, not cash pressure
- Aging buckets trigger different follow-up actions so the oldest invoices get priority
- Disputed invoices have an assigned owner and a documented resolution timeline
- Cash flow is predictable because receivables are managed proactively every week
Related systems we also manage
Frequently Asked Questions
How does accounts receivable management specifically help Everett contractors compete?
Industrial contractors need professional project documentation, organized subcontractor coordination, clean financial reporting, and compliance documentation that demonstrates they can manage a complex project. The systems we build create those capabilities at a process level.
Snohomish County residential growth is adding to our residential volume. How do we manage both industrial and residential work without the systems colliding?
The answer is separate operational tracks for each work type within one operational infrastructure. Residential service and industrial project work have fundamentally different scheduling, billing, and documentation requirements. We configure your systems to handle each correctly without overlap.
Do you require long-term contracts?
No. Month to month. You stay because the work is delivering.
What cities do you serve?
We serve trades contractors throughout Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. See the full city list below.
How long does implementation take?
Most system builds run 30 to 60 days depending on the state of your current setup. The free audit tells us what we are working with before we scope the build.
Can you work with our existing bookkeeper or CPA?
Yes. Our work is on the operational and technology side. We make sure your financial partners get clean, accurate data to work with.
Ready?
Thirty minutes is enough to find out if this is a problem in your operation.
The audit is free. No pitch. No commitment. A straight read on where your systems stand.
No long-term contract. No commitment. No homework after the call.