Finland's IT industry is growing rapidly. According to Technology Industries of Finland, IT services revenue grew 6 percent in 2024, and growth continues. At the same time, the IT entrepreneur's daily life is a balancing act between projects, talent, and cash flow. Consultants' salaries, license fees, and office space require continuous funding – but clients pay on long terms.
Special Financing Challenges in the IT Industry
The IT industry differs from many other sectors from a cash flow perspective. A company's most valuable asset is its people's expertise – not equipment, property, or inventory. This means traditional collateral is lacking, which makes obtaining bank loans challenging. At the same time, personnel costs account for 60–80 percent of an IT company's expenses.
Factors challenging IT industry cash flow:
- Project-based invoicing: revenue comes at milestones or monthly, but salaries run weekly
- Long corporate payment terms: large enterprise clients pay on 45–90 day terms
- Talent investments: recruiting a new consultant costs EUR 5,000–15,000 before they generate revenue
- Technology investments: licenses, cloud services, and development tools require ongoing payments
- Gaps between projects: if a project ends and the next one does not start immediately, salaries still run
According to Statistics Finland, the average accounts receivable turnover for IT services companies was 52 days in 2024. This means that in a 10-consultant firm with an average salary of EUR 5,000/month, approximately EUR 175,000 is continuously tied up in receivables.
Invoice Financing as a Growth Enabler for IT Companies
Invoice financing solves the IT industry's core problem: it converts receivables into cash quickly without traditional collateral. Since an IT company's most valuable asset is people's expertise, traditional bank loans are not always available. In invoice financing, the invoice itself and the paying customer serve as security.
In my own business, I have seen how this works in practice in the IT sector. When a consulting firm wins a new 6-month project, it immediately needs working capital for new consultants' salaries. With invoice financing, the first month's invoice can be converted to cash the next day – thus funding the next month's payroll.
How Does Invoice Financing Work in an IT Consulting Firm?
Typical process for IT industry invoice financing:
- The IT consulting firm invoices its client monthly – e.g. EUR 50,000/month
- The invoice is transferred to the finance company digitally on the same day
- The finance company pays 85–95% (EUR 42,500–47,500) to the account within 24 hours
- Consultants' salaries and license fees are paid on time
- The client pays the invoice on the due date – the finance company remits the remainder minus its fee
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Talent Recruitment and Retention – The Role of Financing
According to the Federation of Finnish Enterprises, 68 percent of IT companies see the talent shortage as the biggest barrier to growth. Recruiting and retaining talent requires competitive salaries, training opportunities, and a good working environment – all of which cost money. A company struggling with cash flow cannot compete for talent.
Invoice financing helps indirectly with talent retention as well. When cash flow is predictable and salaries are always paid on time, the company's reputation as an employer strengthens. Additionally, freed-up capital enables investments in training and tools that keep consultants motivated.
IT Company Financing Options Compared
Several financing options are available for IT companies, and the right choice depends on the company's stage, size, and needs. Below is a comparison of the most common alternatives.
IT company financing options:
- Invoice financing: Fast, no collateral, suited for working capital needs. Cost 1–2.5%.
- Bank loan: Affordable interest, but requires collateral (which IT companies rarely have). Slow application process.
- Finnvera growth loan: Suited for larger investments, reasonable interest. Requires a growth plan.
- Business Finland funding: Innovation funding for product development. Not suitable for working capital.
- Venture capital: Suited for scalable software companies. Dilutes ownership.
- Credit facility: Flexible, but often small for IT companies due to lack of collateral.
According to Business Finland, financing applications from technology companies grew 15% year-on-year. Yet many IT companies are not aware of all available financing options – invoice financing in particular is unknown to many.
Practical Tips for IT Entrepreneurs
As an IT entrepreneur, cash flow management is an ongoing task. Based on my experience, the following measures help the most.
Best practices for cash flow management in IT:
- Invoice monthly, not at the end of the project – milestone invoicing reduces risk
- Negotiate advance payments for new projects – e.g. 20–30% of the project value upfront
- Use invoice financing for large corporate invoices – their payment terms are the longest
- Maintain a 2–3 month cash buffer – covers gaps between projects
- Price correctly: do not forget social charges, vacations, training, and administrative time in pricing
- Diversify the client base – avoid being overly dependent on a single large client
"In the IT industry, clients assume that small consulting firms will be flexible on payment terms. We had to accept a 60-day term from a major bank client. Invoice financing solved the situation – we got the money immediately and the client got the payment terms they wanted."
SaaS vs. Consulting – Different Financing Needs
Within the IT sector, there are significant differences in financing needs. A consulting firm that sells expert work at an hourly rate needs working capital for salaries and suffers from long payment terms. A SaaS company, on the other hand, collects monthly fees but invests heavily in product development before revenue scales.
Invoice financing is particularly well suited for consulting firms whose invoices are large and whose clients are reliable companies. For SaaS companies, better alternatives are often venture capital, Business Finland funding, or revenue-based financing.
Summary
IT industry financing challenges stem from project-based invoicing, long corporate payment terms, and the constant need to invest in talent. Invoice financing is a particularly suitable solution for IT consulting firms because it does not require traditional collateral and scales with invoicing. Combined with proper pricing, advance payment negotiation, and cash flow planning, it enables steady growth for IT companies.
📌 Summary
For IT company cash flow challenges, invoice financing is a flexible solution that frees receivables into working capital without collateral. The cost is 1–2.5% of the invoice value. Invoice financing is an excellent fit for consulting firms; SaaS companies have other options available. Talent recruitment and retention become easier when cash flow is predictable.
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