Electrical supply companies face a common B2B cash flow problem: contractors and commercial buyers often expect net terms, but offering Net 60 can tie up working capital needed for inventory, payroll, supplier payments, and growth. The solution is a stronger credit-to-cash workflow built around net terms financing that helps distributors offer flexible payment terms while getting paid faster, reducing receivables risk, and keeping operations stable.
Net 60 payment terms give buyers 60 days from the invoice date to pay in full. In electrical distribution, these terms are common because many buyers operate on project-based cash flow. Contractors may need to order panels, conduit, lighting, breakers, wiring, controls, and other materials before they receive payment from general contractors, property managers, or end customers.
Unlike consumer purchases, B2B electrical supply orders often move through purchase approvals, job costing, invoice review, and payment scheduling. Guides on payment terms explain that Net 60 gives businesses more time to pay, but for the seller, it also means cash is delayed after the product has already shipped.
Payment terms in electrical distribution usually range from Net 30 to Net 90, with Net 60 sitting in the middle for buyers that need more time to match project cash inflows. The longer the term, the more liquidity the seller must carry while still funding inventory, labor, and supplier obligations.
Contractor customers often prefer Net 60 because materials are needed before milestone payments arrive, large jobs require early material staging, and payment timing can better match collections from completed work. For electrical distributors, Net 60 can support growth, but only when the receivables burden is managed properly.
The cash flow strain begins as soon as materials ship. If a distributor issues a Net 60 invoice today, cash may not arrive for two months or more. If the buyer pays late, the true cash cycle stretches even further.
Broader payment data shows why this matters. The Federal Reserve tracks the continued importance of noncash business payments, while the Small Business Credit Survey shows that cash flow and credit access remain recurring business concerns.
Consider a mid-sized electrical distributor processing $500,000 monthly in Net 60 orders:
That capital is unavailable for supplier payments, warehouse labor, emergency inventory buys, fleet costs, and payroll. The extension from Net 30 to Net 60 increases the amount of cash trapped in receivables, especially when order volume grows quickly.
Electrical distributors face inventory investment, supplier payment timing, seasonal demand, late payment risk, and growth constraints at the same time. The core issue is simple: self-managed Net 60 turns the distributor into a lender. Without the right financing and receivables workflow, growth can weaken cash flow instead of strengthening it.
Modern B2B payments platforms help solve this problem by connecting credit decisions, invoice advances, payment processing, and collections in one workflow. Resolve Pay is built for B2B sellers that want to offer net terms while improving cash flow and reducing receivables risk.
With Resolve Pay, approved invoices can be advanced so the distributor receives cash faster while the buyer keeps agreed payment terms. The distributor submits an approved invoice, Resolve Pay advances eligible value after approval, the buyer pays through the payment workflow on the agreed terms, and Resolve Pay supports reminders, collections, payment processing, and reconciliation. This structure can turn a 60-day receivable into faster operating cash.
Non-recourse financing provides risk protection that self-managed trade credit does not. Resolve Pay takes on the credit assessment, credit decision, and the majority risk of late payments or defaults for approved buyers, helping sellers protect cash flow while still supporting customer flexibility.
For electrical distributors, this means Net 60 can become a managed growth lever instead of an unmanaged receivables burden. Approved invoices can shift much of the late payment and default risk away from the seller, while customers keep the terms they need and payment portals support a professional buyer experience.
Financing solves the liquidity problem, but accounts receivable automation solves the process problem. Electrical suppliers often manage high invoice volume across branches, job accounts, contractors, and recurring buyers. Manual follow-up can quickly become inconsistent.
Effective AR automation supports invoice delivery, payment reminders, self-service portals, multiple payment methods, and automated reconciliation. Resolve Pay’s AR automation platform supports credit, invoicing, reminders, collections, payment processing, and reconciliation. That matters for distributors that want to grow order volume without adding the same level of back-office work.
Intelligent collections automation can help teams prioritize outreach and reduce repetitive work. Instead of relying only on spreadsheets and calendar reminders, finance teams can use automated workflows to keep invoices moving.
AI-supported collections can help with reminders, follow-up workflows, escalation routing, dispute visibility, and consistent buyer communication. The goal is not aggressive collections. The goal is a more consistent payment experience that protects cash flow while preserving customer relationships.
Offering Net 60 safely starts with knowing which buyers should receive credit, how much credit they should receive, and what payment terms fit their risk profile. Manual underwriting can slow orders, especially for new contractors or urgent jobsite needs.
Resolve Pay’s business credit check process supports fast credit assessment using business information, AI models, and credit expertise. This helps distributors make term decisions without relying only on manual trade references or delayed paperwork.
Modern B2B underwriting can evaluate more than a basic credit score. Resolve Pay uses AI, behavioral signals, and credit expertise to assess buyers and support scalable credit decisions. A stronger credit workflow may consider business identity, commercial credit history, payment behavior, cash flow indicators, order size, buying patterns, and existing relationship context. Fast decisions help sales teams respond quickly while finance teams maintain control.
The speed advantage supports emergency orders, new account onboarding, field sales conversations, ecommerce checkout, and account reviews as buyer behavior changes. Distributors can support qualified buyers without turning every credit request into a manual bottleneck.
B2B buy now, pay later and net terms workflows are becoming more important as business buyers expect easier digital purchasing. For electrical suppliers, the goal is not to copy consumer checkout. It is to make B2B purchasing easier while preserving credit discipline and cash flow.
Resolve Pay integrations support ecommerce, ERP, and accounting workflows. The platform lists integrations and support for systems such as QuickBooks Online, Xero, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Magento 2, Shopify, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, and custom API connections.
Embedded net terms can support applications at checkout, buyer credit visibility, invoice syncing, payment reconciliation, and workflows across online, offline, field rep, and invoice-based transactions. For electrical distributors building online channels, embedded terms can remove a common barrier to larger B2B orders: the need to pay immediately for materials tied to projects that will generate cash later.
Flexible payment options can support larger orders, repeat purchasing, stronger loyalty, less checkout friction, and better alignment between ecommerce and field sales. Resolve Pay helps sellers offer terms while keeping liquidity and credit risk under control. That combination matters because growth is only healthy when sales, receivables, and cash flow move together.
Traditional invoice factoring has long been used by distributors that need cash flow relief. However, many electrical suppliers now want solutions that combine financing with credit decisions, AR automation, and embedded payments.
Invoice factoring usually involves selling receivables to a factoring company. The factor provides cash upfront and collects from customers later. Depending on the agreement, factoring may apply broadly to the ledger, may involve customer-facing collections, and may include recourse provisions if invoices are not paid.
This can solve a short-term liquidity problem, but it may not address the broader credit-to-cash workflow. Electrical distributors still need to decide who gets terms, how invoices are reconciled, how buyers pay, and how collections are handled.
Resolve Pay positions itself as a modern alternative to factoring because it combines embedded credit expertise, invoice financing, payment processing, AR automation, and integrations in one platform. Instead of managing disconnected tools for credit, collections, and reconciliation, distributors can use one system to support the full net terms workflow.
This matters most when order volume grows. A spreadsheet-based credit process may work for a small number of accounts, but it becomes harder to manage when a distributor adds more branches, more contractors, more online orders, and more invoice volume.
Resolve Pay customer stories show how better net terms management can support growth and working capital improvements across B2B industries.
Examples include:
These examples are not a guarantee for every distributor, but they show how structured terms, faster funding, and receivables automation can change the economics of B2B sales.
Electrical wholesalers can apply the same principles: faster cash access, stronger customer terms, less manual AR work, improved credit control, and scalable growth. For mid-market electrical distributors competing with larger suppliers, this can help make Net 60 more sustainable.
Successful implementation requires more than turning on a financing tool. Electrical distributors should align credit policy, systems, sales workflows, and customer communication.
A strong implementation plan should review:
Resolve Pay’s integration options help connect net terms, invoicing, reconciliation, and payment workflows into existing financial systems.
Buyers should understand the process clearly. Communication should explain:
The change should feel like a better buyer experience, not a complicated finance process.
Distributors should also plan the financial side:
A clear plan helps Net 60 support growth without creating avoidable cash strain.
Resolve Pay gives electrical supply companies a practical way to offer Net 60 while protecting working capital. Its platform brings together net terms, B2B payments, credit checks, AR automation, collections support, and integrations, helping distributors manage the full credit-to-cash cycle from one place.
For sellers, Resolve Pay can advance approved invoice value so cash arrives faster while buyers keep flexible payment terms. For buyers, the experience is simple: apply for terms, purchase the materials they need, and pay through a branded portal by ACH, wire, credit card, or check. For finance teams, automation reduces manual receivables work and improves visibility across invoices, payments, and credit lines.
Electrical distributors do not have to choose between offering Net 60 and protecting cash flow. With Resolve Pay, terms can become a controlled growth strategy, helping suppliers win contractor business, reduce receivables risk, and keep cash moving through the business.
The biggest risk is working capital depletion. When products ship today but cash arrives 60 days or more later, the distributor still has to fund inventory, payroll, supplier payments, and operations. If several large buyers pay late at the same time, the receivables gap can quickly turn into a cash flow emergency.
Resolve Pay can advance up to 90% of approved invoice value within 24 hours, with funding timing depending on approval, invoice submission, and operational details. This helps sellers reduce the delay created by Net 60 terms while still giving buyers time to pay.
Self-managed Net 60 can increase bad debt risk because the distributor carries the receivable and collection burden. With Resolve Pay’s non-recourse structure for approved buyers, Resolve Pay takes on the credit assessment, credit decision, and majority risk of late payments or defaults, helping reduce seller exposure.
Yes. Resolve Pay supports integrations with major accounting, ERP, and ecommerce systems, including QuickBooks Online, Xero, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Magento 2, Shopify, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, and custom API connections. These integrations help connect checkout, invoicing, payments, and reconciliation.
Automated collections improve consistency. Instead of relying only on manual reminders, Resolve Pay supports payment reminders, branded payment portals, collections workflows, and reconciliation tools. This helps finance teams follow up on invoices more reliably while maintaining a professional buyer experience.
This post is to be used for informational purposes only and does not constitute formal legal, business, or tax advice. Each person should consult his or her own attorney, business advisor, or tax advisor with respect to matters referenced in this post. Resolve assumes no liability for actions taken in reliance upon the information contained herein.