Client complained about being ghosted by someone, then ghosted me after the project was done. Payment never came. Classic ghostingception.
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This cycle is more common than it should be. The moment you stop relying on memory and good faith to get paid, it ends. A scheduled follow-up sequence removes the emotional weight - and the awkwardness of chasing someone you know.
Karma's nice but cash flow doesn't wait for it. Set up a follow-up sequence so you never have to chase anyone twice - including the ones who should know better.
The average small business has $53,000 in outstanding invoices right now. Not bad debt. Not disputes. Just... invoices sitting there unpaid.
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That $53k isn't lost - it's sitting in inboxes waiting for a nudge. Most of it gets paid as soon as the right follow-up lands at the right time. The invoice isn't the problem; the absence of a follow-up sequence is.
Most of that $53k gets paid eventually. It just needs someone to ask. Every business not following up is essentially offering their clients an interest-free loan.
Did a call with their CEO, sent proposal and invoice - yet no response. That's March in a nutshell.
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This is the most frustrating stage of any pipeline - everything went right, then it went quiet. A follow-up sequence at days 3, 7, and 14 post-proposal recovers a surprising number of these. They haven't said no. They've just gone silent.
Two meetings, a CEO call, a proposal, an invoice - then silence. That's not a bad lead. That's a follow-up problem. Most of those close if you stay in the sequence.
Running a small business and chasing late invoices is a part-time job nobody signed up for.
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The best part about automating payment follow-up isn't the time saved - it's the tone consistency. No awkwardness, no guessing whether to chase again. Just clear, professional reminders that go out on schedule regardless of how you're feeling that day.
Running a small business shouldn't mean chasing invoices, digging for receipts, and guessing your cash flow. The work is hard enough already.
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Chasing invoices manually is a confidence drain as much as a time drain. Once that's handled by a system, it stops feeling personal - and clients actually pay faster because the reminders are consistent rather than sporadic.
Same tools. Completely different outcome. The layer in between = the system. Follow-ups triggered automatically, performance tracked and improved weekly.
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Exactly this. Consistent messaging, logged touchpoints, and automated follow-up logic is what turns a capable salesperson into a repeatable revenue machine. The talent was always there - the system is what makes it reliable.
This is the gap most sales teams never close. One shared prompt library plus a follow-up sequence and suddenly you have a pipeline - not a hope-and-pray operation.
Your coaching business doesn't have a sales problem. It has a pipeline problem. No qualified leads = no calls = no clients.
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Spot on. And the pipeline problem is usually a nurture problem - leads that don't convert immediately still convert, they just need consistent follow-up at the right intervals. Most coaching pipelines drop people too early.
Late payments are a perennial problem that hurt cash flows - and spirits. Delighted to see @biztradegovuk tackling this.
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Good to see legislative movement on this. In the meantime, most businesses don't have to wait for policy to fix what a structured follow-up system can solve today. Scheduled payment reminders significantly cut late payments, regardless of what the law says.
5 things your sales system should do without you: 1. Send first message when a lead comes in. 2. Qualify. 3. Send booking link. 4. Follow up if they don't book. 5. Update your CRM at every stage.
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Solid list. Point 4 is where most systems quietly fail - the follow-up gets skipped or done inconsistently, and that's where deals go cold unnecessarily. Getting that one step right often improves conversion more than anything else on the list.
Point 4 is where pipelines go to die. The leads exist, the interest exists - the follow-up just never happens. Fix that one thing and the rest of the list gets a lot more valuable.
Tired of chasing invoices? Flow makes getting paid simple. Built for freelancers and small businesses who want to spend less time on admin and more time doing what they love.
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The admin reduction is real, but the bigger win is consistency - clients receive the same professional experience on every follow-up, not just when you happen to remember. That predictability changes how quickly they pay.
The problem isn't remembering to send invoices - it's remembering to follow up when they're ignored. That's the part that actually kills cash flow. Good to see more tools taking that seriously.