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View videosAnd although smaller amounts seem petty to collect on, they do add up. The customer initially came to you expecting to pay you for your services, so you should be accordingly prepared to bill them for it.
Invoice again, and charge interest
If 30 days lapses since you sent the first invoice and you haven’t received payment, then send another invoice. Although it may seem like an exercise in futility, the following could have happened:
As an answer to these scenarios, issuing a second invoice – and advising that you will charge interest on the balance if it is not paid by a certain date – can be enough motivation for your customer to pay up.
Follow up tenaciously and shamelessly
The second invoice must be followed shortly thereafter (e.g. a week later) with a phone call. Depending on the customer relationship, email may be appropriate, but is just as easy to ignore as an invoice is; if the customer is being difficult, then facing them on the phone (or even in person) can be a more effective way to encourage them to pay up.
Sometimes a customer might have extenuating circumstances that preclude them from being able to pay promptly, but which they are embarrassed to initially divulge. Speaking on the phone with them could solve this issue, and together you can work on a payment plan.
Pick up the check
While following up with your customer, they may come out with the classic “the check is in the mail” line. Sometimes this is true, sometimes not so much. If you believe the customer is trouble, ask when your courier can pick up the check instead. This means you are serious about getting your money.
This could involve a tough judgment call on you part. You like most of your customers (even the ones that don’t pay), and you certainly don’t want to endanger the relationship and ability to get referrals. The trick is not to let a bad situation drag on because you don’t want to pressure your customer into paying you for work you have already done. (Operative words here: paying you for work you have already done; you should not feel bad or awkward about asking for what you deserve).
Cash on delivery for problem customers
If a customer has historically been late to pay up, or if you have reason to believe that they will be especially difficult, avert the crisis before it begins by requesting cash on delivery. If an existing customer has something to say about it, simply inform them that it is a new change in policy.
And if the customer in question already has an outstanding invoice, then you have every right to state that until the original invoice is paid, all future work must be paid up front in cash. If the customer doesn’t like it (especially after you have gone through the steps above to resolve the issue), then they probably weren’t prepared to pay you anyway, and you potentially saved yourself another billable event that you might never collect on.
Ideally, you want customers that pay promptly, and you want those customers to refer you to other ideal customers. Delinquent customers will rarely lead you to ideal ones, so don’t be afraid to cut them loose.
Set a firm policy for new customers
Bending over backwards for new customers in order to secure the business or relationship will only lead to trouble farther down the road. If you set a firm payment policy up front, then customers won’t be surprised or offended or feel that you distrust them – they will simply adapt. Initial deep discounts or lenient payment terms sets a precedent that is incredibly hard to break.
Be Confident!
It is a small measure, but approaching your customers knowing that you provided a valuable service for which you deserve to be paid will translate into quicker collection on accounts. Subconsciously, vultures (i.e. delinquent customers) will prey on those who put up the weakest fight. As a survival of the fittest, the rules of business differ little from the laws of nature.
I would echo your thoughts about re-invoicing -- in fact, I would send a new invoice every 30 days until paid. Never underestimate the "pest" factor when it comes to getting paid. :-)
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Nora Dunn 2 years 9 months and 0 days ago
True enough! Many people shy away from being a pest because they think it will damage the customer relationship. But until you actually get paid, there is no customer relationship at all - it's pro bono!