Order to cash

Order to cash (OTC or O2C) normally refers to one of the top-level (context level) business processes for receiving and processing customer orders and revenue recognition. Order to cash is an essential function in finance; the entire cycle of events happens after a customer places an order until the customer pays for the order; that is, the order is converted to cash.

Beginning in the mid 2000s as more mid-size and large firms began to adopt enterprise systems, the science of business processes, manufacturing processes, and finance began to develop and proliferate to more industries and companies. Business process reengineering became more common, and enterprise architectures and IT solutions[buzzword] were aligned. Hence, the jargon of many other "top-level business processes" became more common.

These include:

  • Marketing to Lead
  • Opportunity to Order
  • Procure-to-Pay (P2P)
  • Issue to Complete (for manufacturing production)
  • Hire to Retire
  • Concept to Launch (for innovation and new product development)
  • Sustain and Retain (for customer service and support)
  • Record to Report" for general ledger processes.

Later, the concept of order-to-cash has been extended to "Lead to Cash" by many software providers[1][2] to include also the marketing and pre-sales process steps.

In many business models, a contractual relationship is established first via a Contract or Subscription. Orders are then received via different sales channels, such as phone, fax, email, internet or salesperson. The contractual relationship is confirmed, and the orders are fulfilled through shipping and logistics. On completion of key events, an invoice is generated and booked as Sales (subject to "revenue recognition" requirements). If payment has not already been received, the debt is recorded and pursued through dunning cycles until the funds are received. Order to Cash is completed by the customer care and Field Service and Repair process (inquiries, requests and complaints).[citation needed]

  1. ^ "What is lead-to-cash".
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).