The Business That Runs on Relationships
A salon is not a balance sheet. It is a network of relationships between stylists and clients, built over years, sustained by consistency, and vulnerable to disruption in ways that a funder’s collections department neither understands nor considers. When an MCA goes to collections, the funder’s tactics (contacting your processor, sending notices to vendors, potentially reaching out to the business’s clients) threaten the relational fabric on which the business depends. Knowing what comes next, before it arrives, is the difference between managing the situation and being managed by it.
Collections Begin Sooner Than You Expect
The first thing to know is temporal. MCA funders do not observe a long grace period. Once payments begin bouncing, the collections process can initiate within days, not weeks. Automated systems flag failed ACH debits rapidly, and the transition from the servicing department to the collections department (or to an outside collections attorney) can occur without notice. If your payments have bounced twice, collections may already be underway.
The Funder May Contact Your Credit Card Processor
The second thing to know is operational and potentially devastating for a salon. Many MCA agreements authorize the funder to redirect your credit card processing revenue. If the funder contacts your processor and exercises this right, your daily card transactions (which, for most salons, represent the majority of revenue) flow to the funder rather than to your business account. You discover this when the day’s receipts do not deposit. Your stylists, who may be booth renters or commission employees, discover it when their compensation does not arrive.
Your Client List Is Not a Collection Target, but Protect It
The third thing concerns your clients directly. If the MCA agreement includes an assignment of receivables and your business invoices clients (corporate accounts, bridal parties, institutional arrangements), the funder may attempt to redirect those payments. For most salon and spa businesses, the majority of transactions are point‑of‑sale and do not involve receivables in the traditional sense. But if you have any accounts receivable, however small, they may be subject to the funder’s lien. Identify whether any such accounts exist and, if so, communicate with those clients before the funder does.