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How Will My Customers View Temporary Nurse Staffing Account Receivable Financing?

Guest post by: Phillip Cohen

Article Overview: When a nurse staffing agency owner is thinking about financing his / her receivables, he / she may worry about how the hospitals, nursing homes and long-term care centers will view the financing arrangement. Furthermore, many temporary nurse staffing business owners are concerned that their customers will view their decision to factor as a indicator that the agency is financially unstable. However, deciding to utilize temporary nurse staffing account receivable financing is actually a positive indication that your nurse staffing business is stable, rapidly growing, and in high demand.

Free Download - Healthcare Staffing Factoring Works For Agency Owners By Phillip Cohen
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How Will My Customers View Temporary Nurse Staffing Account Receivable Financing?

For those temporary nurse staffing agency owners that need a little more help with alleviating your concerns about how your customers will view nurse staffing account receivable funding, consider the following:

Temporary Nurse Staffing Financing is a Sign of Good Business Credit



Temporary Nurse Staffing Factoring Benefits the Agency and Its Customers



Your Customers May Already Work with Temporary Nurse Staffing Account Receivable Financing Firms



Taking the time to educate your customers about why you chose to use temporary nurse staffing account receivable financing should eliminate many of their concerns. If they need further explanation, rest assured that invoice funding firms are also available to help explain your new financial arrangement.

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Home > Business-Financing > Phillip Cohen > How Will My Customers View Temporary Nurse Staffing Account Receivable Financing >
Article Tags: temporary nurse staffing account receivable, temporary nurse staffing factoring, temporary nurse staffing payroll funding

About the Author: Phillip Cohen
RSS for Phillip's articles - Visit Phillip's website

PRN Funding, LLC is an extraordinarily focused niche player in the healthcare invoice funding market place. Through a process known as factoring, PRN Funding provides business owners with the financial resources needed to grow and effectively compete in the industry. With no minimums or fixed terms, PRN Funding (www.prnfunding.com) provides healthcare companies with flexible and immediate access to capital.

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More from Phillip Cohen
Recourse and NonRecourse Nurse Staffing Accounts Receivable Factoring Whats the Difference
Busting Healthcare Staffing Factoring Myths
Home Care Factoring An Alternative Funding Option for Agencies
Alternative Financing Options Home Health Care Factoring
Allied Health Staffing Factoring A Financing Solution for Expanding Companies


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Re: Subscribe to Your Category Re: Subscribe to Your Category - Hi guys - since I'm interested in posts from every category here's what I do: When you log into the forums, on the home page at the top you'll see: View unanswered posts • View unread posts • View new posts • View active topics I just click through the "View unread posts" so I'm sure not to miss anything new.
In-depth understanding of Cash-flow In-depth understanding of Cash-flow - Accounts Payable and Receivable can get a lot of businesses in trouble. You really do need to be careful to ensure you don't come unstuck. Having a credit card or overdraft facility can help in these circumstances though.
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Re: Two Useful Books To Help You Focus On The CLIENT Re: Two Useful Books To Help You Focus On The CLIENT - Hi David, To add to your thread, I'd like to recommend Jonathan Tisch's "Chocolates On The Pillow Aren't Enough: Reinventing The Customer Experience". Tisch's book includes content on "Welcoming Customers", "The New Art of Customization", "The Challenges of Customer Diversity" and "Offering Something Extra to Your Customers" to name a few.
Re: Interrealtionship between financial statements Re: Interrealtionship between financial statements - Hi there, It is not necessary to post each transaction in all of the separate financial statements. In any given transaction, you will post an equal amount of debits and credits to the associated accounts. An example would be if you were to write a check for $500 to office depot for office supplies. The posted transaction would be: DEBIT Office Supplies $500.00 CREDIT Bank Account $500.00 Once the transaction is posted, it will automatically show up on the appropriate financial statement report. In the above example, you would find the Bank Account transaction on the balance sheet and the office supplies transaction on the profit and loss statement. I hope this is clear! Please let me know if you have any other bookkeeping questions. I would be happy to help, Stephanie Horne


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