Beyond Funding: Building Long-Term Merchant Relationships That Drive Repeat Business
David Roitblat is the founder and CEO of Better Accounting Solutions, an accounting firm based in New York City and a leading authority in specialized accounting for merchant cash advance companies. To connect with David or schedule a call about working with Better Accounting Solutions, email david@betteraccountingsolutions.com.
Most MCA companies pour extraordinary energy into acquisition. They chase new files, negotiate with brokers, refine their pitch, and work hard to stand out in a crowded market. This makes sense. Without new deals, there is no business. But acquisition alone does not create stability. Stability comes from the merchants who return.
Renewals are not a softer version of new deals. They are the backbone of sustainable growth. The economics are straightforward: a renewing merchant costs less to acquire, repays more predictably, and requires less hand-holding than a first-time borrower. Yet many funders treat renewals as a pleasant surprise rather than a strategic priority. The companies that mature gracefully understand something different. They understand that long-term merchant relationships are assets, not accidents.
A broker at a mid-sized firm once told me about a call she took late one afternoon from a restaurant owner she had funded six months earlier. He was behind on a project and wanted to talk through his repayment schedule. The conversation lasted fifteen minutes. Nothing dramatic happened. No restructuring, no dispute, no crisis. But when he hung up, he said something she remembered for years: “You’re the only funder who talks to me like a person, not a ticket.” Three months later, he renewed. Not because the rates were the lowest, but because the relationship felt steady, human, and fair.
This is how loyalty forms in the MCA world. Not through marketing, but through moments.
Building those moments with how you communicate. Merchants lead busy, unpredictable lives. Their days rarely follow clean patterns. When they their funder, they need clarity, not scripted reassurance. They want someone who understands where their business A roofing contractor in Arizona faces different pressures than a retail shop in Manhattan. Cash flow rhythms differ. Margins differ. Risks differ. When a funder can speak to those specifics, trust begins to form. Trust does not come from charm. It comes from being understood.
Persistence builds the next layer. Funders sometimes underestimate how closely merchants observe reliability. A merchant might not mention it when a broker forgets a promised check-in, but the impression settles quietly. When a question gets answered with care, when a collector calls in a calm manner instead of an urgent tone, the merchant notices. Consistency becomes a form of respect. It signals that the merchant is more than an entry in the CRM.
Education plays a powerful and often overlooked role. Many merchants enter the MCA world with only a rough grasp of how repayment actually works. They know they will pay daily or weekly, but they do not always understand how those payments interact with their sales cycles or cash reserves. A funder who takes five minutes to explain what to expect earns something valuable. An informed merchant is calmer, less reactive, more likely to communicate early when something shifts. Education lowers tension. It also increases their renewal probability because the merchant feels guided rather than pushed.
Even collections shapes renewal behavior. A merchant who experiences difficulty does not forget how they were treated. Shops that approach collections as a relationship function rather than a mechanical chase recover more money and preserve more trust. When a collector says, “Walk me through your last two weeks so we can figure this out,” the merchant feels supported. When a collector launches straight into pressure, the merchant feels cornered. That memory lingers long after the balance is repaid. It becomes the lens through which the merchant decides whether they want to work with that funder again.
A deli owner in Queens once struggled for three weeks after construction on his block slowed foot traffic. He had not missed payments before, and he answered every call. The funder listened, reviewed the account, and offered a temporary reduction without making the merchant beg for it. The merchant finished the term and renewed later that year. More importantly, he began referring other business owners because, in his words, “These people did right by me.” The return on that fifteen-minute conversation extended far beyond the single file.
Companies often assume merchants renew simply because they need more capital. Many do. But need alone does not create loyalty. Merchants choose to return when they feel the funder stood with them rather than over them. That feeling emerges from a series of small interactions. The call returned promptly. The question answered clearly. The email written without jargon. These small acts compound. They create goodwill that can survive a rough patch.
Speed shapes perception too, though not in the superficial way many firms advertise. Merchants do not need an in an hour. They need predictability. They need to know the process will move when the funder says it will. Funders who set clear expectations, and honor them consistently, outperform those who boast about speed they achieve only some of the time. Reliability feels like partnership. Unpredictable speed feels like improvisation.
Renewal strategy must also respect the merchant’s timing. Some merchants benefit from renewing early. Others resent being pushed into another deal before completing the current one. A funder who recognizes these differences turning renewal into pressure. When a merchant feels free to say “not yet” without disappointing the funder, they often return willingly when the time is right. Respect builds revenue. Pressure builds churn.
Recordkeeping supports all of this. When notes are entered clearly and consistently, any team member can pick up a merchant conversation without forcing the merchant to repeat their story. Imagine how a merchant feels when they call and the person on the line already understands last month’s issue, last week’s deposit pattern, the context around a late payment. That experience feels personal. It also builds confidence in the funder’s competence. At Better Accounting Solutions, we often see that companies with strong financial documentation habits also tend to have stronger merchant relationships. The same discipline that produces clean books produces clean communication.
As a company grows, these relationship practices need structure behind them. You cannot rely on individual employees to carry the ethos alone. Systems must support it. That means standardized follow-up schedules, consistent outreach slow periods, customer notes written in a shared language. It means training that emphasizes respect, clarity, and professionalism. It means leadership reinforcing that renewals are earned through service, not through pursuit.
The payoff is significant. Renewal merchants have lower acquisition costs and steadier repayment patterns. They ask fewer basic questions, because they trust the funder. They create fewer surprises, because they communicate earlier. They become the foundation on which the company can build more ambitious strategies. New business drives excitement. Renewals drive efficiency. The most profitable MCA companies treat renewals not as bonus volume, but as central to the business model.
Merchants talk to each other more than funders realize. A good experience travels through neighborhoods, industries, and online forums quickly. A bad experience travels faster. A funder who handles renewals with thoughtfulness and consistency often finds themselves receiving inbound interest from merchants they never contacted. The relationship becomes its own marketing channel.
Strong merchant relationships do not require grand gestures. They require steady, thoughtful attention. They require a funder who sees beyond the advance and into the life of the business receiving it. They require patience with timing and firmness with expectations. They require a team that communicates clearly and listens carefully. When these elements come together, renewals stop feeling like sales. They feel like the natural continuation of a working partnership.
An MCA shop that masters this, discovers that long-term relationships are not sentimental goals. They are strategic ones. They stabilize the portfolio. They reduce volatility. They lower costs. They widen the circle of opportunity. And they transform a funding business from constantly chasing the next deal into something that grows from deepening roots.
Last modified: March 26, 2026David Roitblat is the founder and CEO of Better Accounting Solutions, an accounting firm based in New York City, and a leading authority in specialized accounting for merchant cash advance companies.
To connect with David, email david@betteraccountingsolutions.com.






























