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Estimated reading time: 3 minutes
It’s Only Common Sense: Excuses Don’t Pay Invoices
I’ve been in this industry long enough to hear just about every excuse salespeople make to explain why they cannot do their job: tariffs, supply chain snarls, material shortages, labor walkouts, and late trucks. The list is endless. What do all these have in common? Not a single one has ever put a dime in the bank, because excuses don’t pay invoices.
The customer doesn’t care that your supplier shipped FR-4 instead of polyimide, that your operator called in sick, the plating line broke down, raw copper cost you more this month, or that your state-of-the-art ERP system was “down for maintenance.” Customers only care about one thing: Did you deliver what you promised, on time, with the quality they expect?
Every company is dealing with tariffs, facing labor shortages, and looking for that missing component that went on allocation three months ago. The difference between those who succeed and those who fail is never in their excuses, but in their responses. Some companies sit around the conference table crafting elaborate explanations as to why they failed. Others get on the phone and find another supplier, another machine, another way to get it done.
Here’s the harsh truth: Your customer has their own problems. They’re juggling deadlines, shortages, and internal politics. They didn’t order your excuses; they ordered your boards. If you start every call with, “Well, we would have shipped on time, but…” you’re not a partner, you’re a liability.
Think about the impression you leave. Every excuse you make tells your customer: “We are not in control. We can’t be counted on.” That erodes trust. Once your credibility is gone, your price, your certifications, and your quality scores are meaningless.
Additionally, if you normalize making excuses, you create a culture within your own company that accepts that missing commitments is just another day at the office. An operator who hears management say, “Well, we can’t help it, the laminates are late,” learns that blame-shifting is the norm. A salesperson who hears, “The customer just doesn’t understand how hard this is,” learns that dodging accountability is acceptable. Excuses spread like viruses, and before long, mediocrity is the culture. Companies that rise above say, “Here’s the problem, here’s what we’re doing about it, and here’s when you’ll have your boards.” That’s accountability, and customers respect accountability more than flawless performance. Every company stumbles. Every factory has breakdowns. But when you own your issues, act decisively, and take responsibility, you earn trust, and trust is the true currency of business.
It’s easier to say, “The truck broke down” than it is to drive through the night and deliver the product yourself, or “That material’s back ordered” rather than call 20 other suppliers and negotiate an alternative, or “We’re short-staffed” rather than place your leadership team on the floor to run the machines. But here’s the rub: only one of those options gets the job done, retains the customer, and keeps the cash flowing. Excuses are cheap. Solutions are a hard road, but they are the only road to survival.
Years ago, I visited a shop that was constantly missing deliveries. Every time I asked why, they had an excuse: the inspectors were behind, the drill bits were wrong, the plating baths were off. Within a year, the company shut down. They excused themselves right into bankruptcy.
At another shop, a laminator broke down the day before a job was due. Instead of calling the customer with excuses, the owner rented a truck, drove three hours to a competitor, begged them to laminate the job overnight, and delivered the order on time. That customer still buys from him 20 years later.
Ultimately, every excuse you make is a hole in your cash flow. Customers don’t extend credit out of sympathy or pay invoices because you tried. They pay because you deliver. No excuses, no delays. That’s the cold mathematics of business.
Excuses don’t pay invoices. To survive, stop rehearsing why you can’t deliver and focus on how you will. That’s the only narrative customers buy, the only story that builds trust, and the only way that ensures payment of invoices.
Excuses are the language of failure. Accountability is the language of survival. Choose wisely. It’s only common sense.
Dan Beaulieu is president of D.B. Management Group.
More Columns from It's Only Common Sense
It’s Only Common Sense: Marketing Isn’t Fluff, It’s AmmunitionIt’s Only Common Sense: Your Biggest Competitor Is Complacency
It’s Only Common Sense: The Phone Is Still Mightier Than the Keyboard
It’s Only Common Sense: If You’re Not Differentiated, You’re Dead
It’s Only Common Sense: Stop Whining About the Market—Outwork It
It’s Only Common Sense: Pricing PCBs? It’s All in Their Heads
It’s Only Common Sense: Sales Strategies for a Virtual World
It’s Only Common Sense: Storytelling That Sells—Stop Pitching, Start Painting Pictures