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by hinkley 159 days ago
The thing about dissolving a company is that they generally should have done it before getting a bunch of services without paying for them.

Like a gambler they think the big win is coming any second and they drag it out too long, leaving a bunch of unpaid bills behind then.

4 comments

Really no reason to speculate. Could be a life crisis, ill health ect.
Or worse, planned on not paying in the first place and made off with investor cash while maintaining the appearance of moving on their venture.
I want to be a producer!
As a contractor some of this is on you also. Before extending credit to a client you should do some due diligence on their ability to pay.
I worked at a couple places where the vendors got wise and moved to cash in advance or net30 from net90 for us. We probably deserved it.
But how? Make them show me their books? Aside from a downpayment idk what else there is
You could do a credit check.

And in this particular case since they're a UK company, yeah, you can just look at their reported accounts.

2023

CURRENT ASSETS: £571

Creditors: Amounts Falling Due Within One Year: £28,051

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That's not a client I'd take.

As a customer or a vendor, being able to see any company's health like this must be wonderful if you're evaluating whether you want to enter a relationship with them. More of the world should do this.
I legitimately did not know we could do that in the US. A cursory search says we can I think?
Wait, what, Anyone can check the balance of a UK company's chequing account?
Limited liability companies have to submit their accounts annually. Most small business accounts aren't audited, so it's self-reported at that level, but still useful to check scale, cash crunch, etc.
Well isn't it possible that this is a recurring service? Like that he's also buying web hosting from the web dev