Questions About AP & AR Management?
We’ve answered the most common questions from Canadian finance teams about streamlining invoice processing, payment reconciliation, and cash flow optimization.
Most organizations process invoices manually in 15–20 minutes each. With proper invoice capture and three-way matching automation, that drops to 2–3 minutes. For a team handling 500 invoices monthly, that’s roughly 100–150 hours of manual work eliminated. The payback period is typically 4–6 months when you factor in reduced errors and faster payment cycles.
DSO (Days Sales Outstanding) measures how long it takes customers to pay you—think of it as your cash collection speed. DPO (Days Payable Outstanding) is the opposite: how long you take to pay vendors. You want to increase DPO while decreasing DSO to improve cash flow. It’s about timing: collect faster, pay smarter. Many Canadian businesses overlook this balance and end up with cash flow gaps that hurt growth.
Build a simple tracking system into your payment workflow. Flag invoices with 2/10 Net 30 terms (2% off if paid in 10 days) during data entry. Create a vendor discount report you review weekly—it takes 10 minutes and could save thousands annually. Many organizations leave 1–3% on the table just because discounts slip through the cracks.
Run AP and AR aging reports monthly—preferably at month-end for financial reporting. For AP, focus on items over 60 days: investigate payment holds or process failures. For AR, prioritize anything over 90 days for collections outreach. Don’t just generate them; set a 30-minute review meeting to identify patterns. You’ll spot systemic issues like late-paying customers or vendor disputes before they become problems.
A typical two-tier approach works well: invoices under $5,000 go to department managers, everything above goes to the finance controller. Adjust thresholds based on your risk tolerance and team size. Build in escalation for exceptions (unfamiliar vendors, budget mismatches) so you catch problems early without creating bottlenecks. The goal is control without crushing your finance team with paperwork.
Record transactions in their original currency, then apply a consistent conversion rate (usually month-end spot rate) for reporting. Separate your reconciliation process: reconcile CAD accounts to CAD bank statements, USD to USD. Track realized and unrealized foreign exchange gains/losses in a dedicated account for tax and reporting purposes. This prevents confusion and makes your audit cleaner.
Ready to streamline your AP and AR processes?
Let’s talk about how we can help your team work smarter with invoices, aging reports, and payment reconciliation.
Schedule a conversation