When Clients Don’t Pay: Part II – How to Get Paid without Hiring Muscle

In my last post, When Clients Don’t Pay: How to Collect Without Involving the Mafia, I shared some experiences and talked about steps you can take before you even start to get worried about not getting paid.

This post focuses on what to do after you’ve taken all those steps and remain empty-pocketed.

We talked about maintaining a business relationship, whether or not you plan to work with this client again. A good way to do this to keep things on a business level. Once you make it all personal and emotional, it’s almost impossible to recover. You may feel like strangling the object of your invoice woe, but save it for your daydreams.

You can still get what your entitled to without drama or… screaming. Trust me on this one, I’ve been both the screamer and the screamee; you lose even when you “win.”

So the first step in our collection process is a simple, friendly reminder. A short e-mail will suffice, like this:

I just wanted to see how things are going with those new web graphics. If you need some help implementing them, just let me know.

Did you have any questions on the invoice I sent last week? If so, I’m happy to answer them.

At this point you aren’t out to hassle anyone or demand anything. You’re just trying to get the communication going. Most of the time when I do this I get one of four responses:

  1. I never got it.
  2. Oops - I have it but forgot to send it to accounting.
  3. You didn’t get a check yet? I’m so sorry, let me look into that.
  4. I have it and I’ll pay you as soon as I can.

If they never got it, simply send it again – but follow up right away to make sure they did. For #2 and #3, set a reminder to check in a week later with another friendly inquiry. If you get a #4, that’s still a good thing. It says that they are communicating to you an intention to pay. At least they’re not disputing the bill. That’s a whole post in itself.

Are they lying? Maybe, but you can’t assume so and the good news is that you have them talking. They didn’t say they wouldn’t pay, so chill out a bit.

So when do we get to start harassing them for the money? How about never?

That’s right. Never work the harassment angle. There are laws against that sort of thing and it won’t make it easier to get paid. The things is, you’ve got a logical system of figuring your chances of getting a check, which involves answering some basic questions:

  1. Are they communicating with you?
  2. Do they have the bill?
  3. Do they intend to pay?
  4. Do they have the money to pay?

The only two that you have any control over are #2 and #3. If they don’t have the bill, send it (or send it again). If they intend to pay but haven’t you can ask again at a later date.

You can’t control whether or not they communicate with you or the balance in their checking account. Do you have to give up? Of course not, but you didn’t expect I would tell you to give up anyway, did you?

If a client owes you money but isn’t communicating with you, the first thing you need to do is make sure you’ve tried all methods of reaching them. Sending another e-mail after they didn’t answer the first three is, well… kinda stupid. Did you try calling them? Did you leave a voicemail? Did you snail mail them a copy of the invoice? Did you send it with a return receipt?

What you need to find out is if they are receiving you. Servers go down, businesses move, family crises come up, mailrooms lose mail, and all of these things can happen without someone keeping you in the loop. So before you assume they’re ignoring you, try every method until you get a response (a return receipt might be considered a response). You’re just searching for a pulse here.

If you get a pulse, great. Now you can work from those possible action steps we talked about earlier.

If you don’t get a pulse, you can still dig deeper to contact your client. If it’s a medium to large-sized business, it’s a little easier. Are they a member of the Better Business Bureau? How about their local Chamber of Commerce? Do they have a web site or blog? Find out if they’re even still in business. If they aren’t, you may be out of luck, or it’s possible there’s someone new handling the company’s debts. It’s research, it’s detective work, but how badly do you want that money?

How about the client who intends to pay but doesn’t have the money? Before you get a hornet in your crotch, go back to that relationship thing we talked about. Ask yourself some tough questions about the situation.

Have I enjoyed working with this client? Do I want to work with this client again? Is this a chronic issue or a one-time problem?

As I write this, I’m in this very situation with a good client. Last year we did a lot of business together and he either paid early or at least on time. I recently completed a project for him and it’s becoming obvious that he simply doesn’t have the money to pay the invoice, which is about 30 days past due. He intends to pay me and we are communicating.

I recently offered to break the invoice into payments which should make it easier for him. Ideally I would have a nice influx of cash all at once, because I’ve got my own bills to pay. I have some choices.*

I can get nasty and demand that he start paying immediately. Should I care how he gets my money? Just friggin’ get it, man! 

It might feel good to let off some steam, but that probably won’t get me any farther ahead. Likely, we’ll never do business again, even after he pays me.

What I will do is be a little patient with him. This doesn’t mean he can walk all over me; we do need to agree on a manageable payment schedule. I’m fair, but I’m firm about this.

Also, I’m not going to begin any new projects with him until this invoice is paid (I hope that’s obvious, but I felt I should mention it). For future projects, we’ll have to work out a deposit or escrow system to avoid this happening again. Not only will I be certain I’m going to get paid, I’ll feel more relaxed working the gig.

This begs the question, what if I don’t want to work with this client ever again?

Fair enough. Even if you don’t intend to do any future work with that client, you need to stick to a businesslike bearing. Wearing your disgruntled emotions on your sleeve is not going to get you what you want anyway. Besides, who knows what connections this client has? If they tell their network how much you sound like a snorting bull on the phone, it could come back to haunt you.

My intention here is to show you new ways to think about your situation. Be honest, don’t you care a little bit more about getting paid when your own business is slow? Try not to let your own financial worries interfere with the good relationships you’ve worked hard to cultivate.

Maybe you’ve gone through every thought process and action step I’ve outlined here and you’re still not getting paid. What now, Mr. Smarty Pants Client Compassion Guy?

There are actions you can take. In my next post, I’ll talk about where to go from here. I’ll talk to some freelancers who have dealt with this situation, and I’d love to get a handful of experiences from our readers. Please consider this question for your response:

Have you used a collection agency or attorney to get a client to pay? If so, what was your experience?

Post your comments below, or e-mail me at david@sparkyfirepants.com. Please leave out the names of any clients you’ve had issues with!

*As I post this, the client I wrote about in the example has paid. For the record, I didn’t have to break any limbs or call a federal agency.

David Billings is an illustrator, animator, and writer. He currently runs two businesses from his home studio near beautiful Mount Hood, Oregon.

Sparky Firepants Images is focused on building kids’ brains to ginormous sizes while they have a crazy time. David creates fantastic, colorful images that complement books and educational media for preschool and elementary-level kids. A unique perspective on children’s publishing and the business of illustration can be found on his blog.

He also uses his technical expertise in creating corporate graphics and presentations to consult with and assist presenters of all types, keeping their audiences rapt with attention. Prepared Graphics focuses on helping individuals and small business owners with great content who don’t want to mess around with that PowerPoint stuff.

David lives with his wife and children on an alpaca farm. No, they don’t really smell that bad.

Do you tell your clients you work out of a home office?

That is the question I am asking in this weeks reader poll. I have been curious what the readers of Home Office Warrior do when they are asked this question or when they are talking to potential clients. So, take a second to answer the poll which I have included below.

And if you have additional comments, please leave them here so we can keep this conversation going.

Ask the Readers — What is your best tip?

This weeks edition of Home Office Tips and Hints — The Links will be hosted by @halosecretarial at her great blog Halo Secretarial Which will be wonderful in that it will provide all of you with a different look at some different links from someone other than me.

However, I am not going to let any of you off the hock that easy. In order to make this week’s edition even bigger and better, with Laurie’s edition of “The Links”, I thought we would do a “Reader’s Best Tip” post too.

So, submit your best tip you would give someone brand new to the home office world. Something you would have really liked to have known when you first started working from a home office. No holding back either. Any tip will work. Leave your comments here or drop me a direct message on twitter at @grantgriffiths

What I will do is than take all of the tips provided either in the comments to this post or on twitter and make a post including them all. Not only will your tip be featured, you will get linkage too. And if you have more than one tip, don’t stop with one. Lets get the conversation going.

Open Thread — What are your essential tools for your home office?

thread.jpgThat’s right, what are the essential tools you have to have in your home office. Whether they stay there or go with you when you are working outside the office.

I get this question often. In an effort to get some idea of what the readers of HOW are using, I wanted to make this an “open thread”. And if the response is good, we can make this a weekly feature. Also, if there are questions you would like to ask your fellow readers of HOW, add those to your comments.

This should really be fun. I love comparing the different tools people use to be productive and to get work done. Include anything you feel you could not live without.

Ask the Readers :: Tips for dealing with information overload

Help.jpgI asked again and you the readers of Home Office Warrior came through. Below are the tips provided by some of you on how to deal with information overload. Thanks once again. If there is a specific question you would like to “ask the readers,” please drop me an email at grant@homeofficewarrior.com.

Lois from Home Base Holidays had this to say:

Very relevant topic! I increasingly need to be more selective about what I spend time scanning or reading in depth. I still subscribe to blogs, ezines, etc that are of interest and should be useful for my business. However, I am now much quicker to unsubscribe if most of the information is not very relevant or if it is too frequent.

I found it refreshing this week when I unsubscribed from 5 different ezines I was receiving. I also did some spring cleaning of my RSS reader.

Lois goes on to state:

I would far sooner receive one or two useful communications a week (i.e. an amount I can cope with) than to be bombarded every day. I know that blogs need to be kept updated but, unfortunately, some bloggers think this means they have to publish a new post every day even if they don’t have the time to spend to provide thoughtful and useful information. Less can often be more!

Rocket Matter’s Larry Port provided these handy ideas:

What I find useful, though I don’t always follow this, is to rope off time for these kind of activites. I check email in the morning and after lunch (unless they are support emails which we jump on).

I use Google reader to fly through RSS, which I do once a day if I’m lucky, or batch up for the weekend.

Facebook and LinkedIn, I check a couple of evenings a week or when I get an invite.

Twitter I am terrified of for this very reason. I have enough information to managed without getting tweated or whatever it’s called. So I’ve stayed away for now.

I think I have convinced Larry to join the twitter landslide. I will watch for his following of my twitter.

Susan Cartier Liebel, a regular commenter on HOW and publisher of Build a Solo Practice, LLC had without a doubt the most interesting suggestion.

Oddly enough, when I have information overload I do what I did in law school: I read a novel. When I was studying for the bar I actually decompressed by reading more than three novels a week. It isn’t the brain over working…it’s what it is working on, I find. And I’m one of those who can never shut her brain off..so I have to redirect it’s efforts.

Technotheory’s very own Jared Goralnick provided these two links. Escape from information overload and just read what you want to. It works and Walk away if its not worth it: the real first step to getting it done. Two great post Jared, thanks.

Carmel from Quant gave us this:

  • Too much email.
    I found Clear Context helpful when using Outlook. I am now using GMail and RTM. Using the basic principles of GTD really seems to work. I have an Inbox Challenge running on Twitter you can follow (www.twitter.com/quantie)
  • Too many RSS feeds
    I am trying to keep feeds to a manageable number so I unsubscribe to some when I add new ones. I try to weigh up time v value on each feed. (For Lifehacker, only taking top stories).
  • Too much snail mail
    Get electronic bills for everything possible. Set up automatic payments. The amount of paperwork that arrives the kids school is shocking. Current week’s newsletter goes up in the kitchen. Everything else is actioned on immediately (if less than 2 minutes aka GTD). Reference material is scanned and the rest discarded. The Fujistu ScanSnap is one of the best tools I have in the office. I am a terrible paper hoarder and never get around to filing but since getting the Scansnap my office looks great and I feel in control. Buy a scanner.
  • Yellow Highlighter Virtual Assistance blogger, Meredith Eisenberg had these great tips:

    Two things that help me:

    1. Colored labels in gmail. I have it set up so emails from cients get their own colored label. That way, I can see at a glance if I have any important emails.
    2. Turning email and twitter off when I’m in focused work mode. I get so much more done.

    All of the tips are great and just goes to show the quality of the readers of Home Office Warrior. Be watching for the next installment of “Ask the Readers.”