Business credit monitoring
Business credit monitoring or company tracking is the monitoring of a business's credit history. Largely used as a method to determine a company's ability to pay its debts, this type of monitoring/tracking can help credit grantors determine the creditworthiness of a business. The use of these reports varies and may range from protecting against suspected fraud to assessing business performance. Companies are fluid and rapidly changing; a company that may seem secure one day can become a risk overnight. While a single report is just a snapshot in time, monitoring business credit over time provides a much wider perspective on a business.[1]
Business credit monitoring can provide instantaneous email alerts about notable or suspicious activity. In South Carolina, businesses filing tax returns were invited to enroll in free business credit monitoring services provided by credit agencies Dun & Bradstreet and Experian. The invitation was made after state officials claimed that an international computer hacker accessed data from up to 657,000 businesses in what experts call the largest cyber-attack against a state tax agency in the nation.[2][3][4]
The value of a business may increase when more credit becomes available to that business. Business credit reports may sometimes used by potential business partners and investors to determine how credible a company is. As a business owner, it can be useful to understand how your own business credit report will be seen and in turn how you can improve it.
In the United Kingdom, the Big Three credit agencies all offer this service as well as smaller bureaus.
References
- "The Telegraph Festival of Business 2016". The Telegraph. 3 August 2016 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- "South Carolina businesses offered credit monitoring » Anderson Indepe…". Archived from the original on 16 February 2013.
- Theis, Lindsey (2 November 2012). "Business owners sign up for credit service after SC hack attack". WPDE.