Collection Effectiveness Index (CEI) is an accounts receivable metric that measures accounts receivable management efficiency. Credit and collection professionals use it to determine payment recovery effectiveness.
CEI provides collection effort insights for a small business and larger organizations.
Many companies use accounts receivable software or other accounting software to gain real-time visibility into collection effectiveness index and collection metrics.
The formula for calculating the collections effectiveness index is:
CEI = ( Beginning Receivables − Ending Receivables)/( Beginning Receivables) − Credit Sales) × 100
Here's what each component of the AR KPI represents:
The resulting percentage shows the collection effectiveness during the collection period.
A high CEI suggests efficient cash collections, and a low CEI shows challenges in the accounts receivable performance.
Let's walk through an example to illustrate how to calculate CEI.
Suppose a company has the following financial information for a specific period:
Now, we can use the formula to calculate the CEI:
CEI = ( Total Receivables − Ending Receivables ) / Current Receivables − Credit Sales) × 100
Collection Effectiveness Index = (100,000−80,000)/(100,000−50,000) × 100
CEI = (20,000)/(50,000) × 100
CEI = 0.4 × 100
CEI = 40%
In this example, the Collection Effectiveness Index is 40%, showing that the company could collect 40% of current receivables.
This value depends on industry benchmarks and the company's historical performance. A higher CEI is favorable.
A higher CEI ratio is considered better. A ratio above 80% indicates effective accounts receivable management. Late payments, net credit sales, and unclear net terms negatively affect it.
While CEI gives a snapshot of collections process efficiency for a specific period, ARTR provides a more comprehensive AR management view. Both contribute to a holistic understanding of a company's accounts receivable process, performance, and cash flow impact.
Note: CEI evaluates debt collection efforts over a period without involving personal information to ensure privacy and compliance.
Note: The collection effectiveness index measures debt collection efficiency, while average accounts quantify managed or affected accounts.
Collection effectiveness index and Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) are vital financial management metrics in accounts receivable. They serve different purposes and provide insights to track accounts receivable KPIs.
CEI focuses on cash collection management. It calculates the outstanding receivables a company collects during that period. The formula compares receivables to credit sales. A low CEI means the sales ratio is high, but payments aren't collected on time, giving rise to bad debt.
DSO is another receivable KPI that focuses on average days to collect an outstanding invoice after a sale. It measures payment terms and provides insight into collections process and credit management. A low DSO shows a quicker collection and cash conversion cycle.
CEI monitoring and improvement are critical for cash flow optimization, liquidity improvement, and financial position maintenance.
The Collection Efficiency Index measures how well a company collects cash within a given period, comparing collected amounts to the amount of receivables available for collection at the start and end of the period.
Assess its percentage: values closer to 100% indicate effective debt collection, while lower ones suggest room for improvement in total receivables.
Measure the collection effectiveness with CEI calculation, which compares total receivables collected to the amount available for collection, highlighting the efficiency of the collection process over a specific period.
A good Collections Effectiveness Index ratio is above 80%.