Practical strategies you can implement this week — without asking the bank for loans.

According to Banco de Portugal data, the average collection period for Portuguese SMEs is 67 days — almost double the European average. While you wait, you still have to pay wages, suppliers, taxes, and rent. This gap is the main cause of treasury problems.
The good news: there are concrete strategies to close this gap without creating more debt.
DSO measures how many days it takes, on average, to get paid by customers. Every day less frees up capital.
Calculate your current DSO with our free calculator →
If you pay suppliers in 15 days but get paid in 60, you run a 45-day deficit. Negotiating longer terms with suppliers is legitimate and common.
Calculate your DPO → | What is confirming? →
If you hold term invoices from reliable customers, you can advance the amount in 24-48 hours. It is not a loan — it is simply getting paid earlier for what you are already owed.
How factoring works → | Factoring vs Overdraft: which costs less? →
If more than 25% of your revenue comes from a single customer, your treasury depends on their financial health. If that customer delays payments, the impact is devastating.
Assess your concentration risk →
High fixed costs mean you need more revenue to reach break-even. Review:
Calculate your break-even point →
Most SMEs only discover they have a treasury problem when the balance goes negative. A simple weekly forecast — expected inflows vs committed outflows — avoids surprises.
Connecting your ERP to a treasury-management platform lets you see in real time: DSO, DPO, receivables ageing, customer concentration, and deterioration alerts. No spreadsheets, no surprises.
Connect the ERP and see DSO, DPO, and working capital in real time.
Request access →