Knowing exactly when to transition from a polite follow-up to a formal escalation is a critical skill for finance teams and business owners. Escalating too late risks non-recovery, while escalating too early can burn bridges with valuable partners. This guide outlines the professional middle path to securing what you are owed.
1. Why Unpaid Invoices Stall in Construction
Construction billing is uniquely complex. Between pay-when-paid clauses, retainage, and multi-tier payment chains, delays are often systemic rather than malicious. Frequently, an invoice stalls not because the funds aren’t there, but because the documentation—such as lien waivers or insurance certs—has hit a bottleneck.
- Administrative oversight in the approval hierarchy.
- Discrepancies in percentage-of-completion reporting.
- Back-office processing delays during peak project cycles.
2. Early Warning Signs It’s Time to Escalate
Consistency is your greatest tool. When communication patterns shift, it is often the first signal that a standard payment delay is turning into a collection risk.
- The “Ghosting” Phase: Previously responsive project managers stop returning calls or emails specifically regarding the aging invoice.
- Unsubstantiated Disputes: New complaints about work quality appear only after the invoice has passed the 60-day mark.
- Broken Promises: Specific payment dates are provided but consistently missed without prior explanation.
3. Why Escalating Too Early Can Backfire
Aggressive collection tactics deployed prematurely can be as damaging as no action at all. At Kore United, we emphasize the “Relationship First” approach.
If you move to high-pressure tactics while the client is genuinely working through a project-level funding delay, you risk being blacklisted from future bids. Furthermore, heavy-handed legal threats early on can trigger a “hunker down” mentality from the debtor’s legal department, effectively freezing all voluntary communication.
4. The Professional Middle Path to Escalation
Successful escalation involves increasing the “formality” of the outreach without increasing the “hostility.” This is achieved through:
- Audit-Ready Communication: Moving from informal emails to structured demand letters that reference contract specificities.
- Third-Party Neutrality: Utilizing a specialized collection partner who understands construction nuances and can act as a professional mediator.
- Documentation Verification: Re-submitting all necessary lien waivers and supporting data to remove any “valid” excuses for delay.


