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An electrical contractor is preparing their weekly two-week cash flow look-ahead on Friday. They are analyzing their current accounts receivable to determine which cash inflows are realistic to include in the 14-day window. Assume Week 1 covers Days 1 to 7, and Week 2 covers Days 8 to 14.

  1. Customer A: A residential client who was billed $600 today for an emergency panel repair. Terms are 'Due on Receipt.' Historically, emergency residential clients pay immediately on-site via credit card.
  2. Customer B: A commercial general contractor with a milestone invoice of $15,000 submitted today. Terms are 'Net 30.' Historically, this general contractor pays on Day 35.
  3. Customer C: A custom home builder with an outstanding $8,000 invoice. While the invoice is technically due in 3 days, the builder is currently disputing the quality of the rough-in wiring, and negotiations are ongoing.
  4. Customer D: A repeat retail property manager who was billed $4,500 under 'Net 10' terms. They historically pay exactly on Day 10. The invoice was sent 3 days ago.

To ensure the cash flow look-ahead is a reliable decision-making tool, the contractor must analyze the probability and timing of these inflows. They should exclude Customer B's payment (which falls outside the 14-day window) and Customer C's payment (due to the unresolved dispute).

The contractor must assign the realistic inflows to the correct weeks. Therefore, the total expected cash inflow that the contractor should record for Week 1 is ____.

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Updated 2026-05-17

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