It still baffles me when people are surprised to get paid quickly for work they did. I recently worked with a few people on a couple of different projects. Once the projects were completed, I paid their invoices almost instantly. Clients expecting work to be delivered on time is normal, but I don't get why expecting to be paid on time can quickly become 'problematic'... And it happened again with a French client who is now 3 months late paying for an 'ultra urgent, very tight timeline project' (which was completed on time, of course).
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The urgency asymmetry is real. They need it yesterday, you need payment eventually. One thing that's helped our clients: structured milestone payments with automated reminders. Takes the awkwardness out of chasing and sets the expectation before the work even starts.
Funny how 'ultra urgent' only applies to the delivery timeline, never the payment one. The fix is simple: stop being the bank. Milestone payments, automated reminders, and a clear late-payment policy - set once, enforced always.
43% of UK freelancer invoices are paid late. That is not a statistic. That is rent, groceries, and sleepless nights. Anyone else living this? #LatePayments #FreelanceUK #SmallBusinessUK #CashFlow
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It's wild that nearly half of freelancers are essentially extending interest-free credit to clients. Most of this is solvable with a follow-up sequence - a polite nudge at 3 days, a firmer one at 7, escalation at 14. Automation removes the emotional weight from the process.
43% because most freelancers would rather lose sleep than send a second email. The clients who pay late aren't evil - they're just responding to a system that doesn't follow up. Build the system. Watch the number drop.
Silence after a proposal can be nerve-wracking. Don't let Sales Anxiety hold you back! A simple follow-up can turn a drift into an opportunity. Most deals don't die; they just need a nudge.
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This is underrated advice. Research consistently shows that most sales are made between the 5th and 12th contact, yet most people stop after one or two. The deals are there - they just need a consistent, patient follow-up cadence.
Most proposals don't get rejected. They get forgotten. The person who follows up wins the deal - not because they're pushier, but because everyone else stopped.
Client ghosting after delivery is brutal. My default now: deposit before kickoff, milestones with explicit approval, and a line that final files plus usage rights transfer only after final payment. What part of that is hardest to enforce in your workflow?
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Solid framework. The hardest part for most people isn't setting the terms - it's enforcing the follow-up when things go quiet. Automated payment reminders at each milestone take the personal discomfort out of it. You set the rules once, the system holds the line.
The hardest part? Actually following up when they go silent. Everyone writes the contract, almost nobody builds the system that enforces it. Automate the chase - your future self will thank you.
5 signs your GTM is ready for automation: 1. You're doing the same manual tasks more than 3 times a week. 2. Leads are going cold because follow-up is inconsistent. 3. Your CRM data is a mess because logging is manual. 4. You can describe your ideal client precisely. 5. You've got a process that works but no capacity to scale it.
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Point 2 is where most revenue leaks happen. Inconsistent follow-up isn't a discipline problem - it's a systems problem. Once you automate the cadence, conversion rates climb because no lead falls through the cracks anymore.
Number 2 is doing more damage than most founders realise. Every cold lead is a conversation you already paid to start. If your follow-up depends on someone remembering to send an email, you've already lost.
Nobody is coming to fix your lead response problem. Not your CRM vendor. Not your receptionist. Not next quarter's budget. The decision to automate is yours. And every day you delay, leads are going cold.
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The lead response data is stark - responding within 5 minutes makes you 21x more likely to qualify a lead versus 30 minutes. Most businesses take hours or days. Speed-to-follow-up is one of the simplest competitive advantages available.
Hard truth: your CRM is only as good as the follow-up it triggers. Most businesses have a lead capture system and a lead neglect system. They just call the second one 'we'll get to it next week.'
I'll be the French-Bulgarian ex-Coach who will automate all the shitty tasks that every trainer with more than 10 clients hates: Payment chaos, Scheduling hell, Client ghosting - New clients go silent after week 2-3, no follow-up system, scattered progress tracking.
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Client ghosting after week 2-3 is one of the most common patterns in coaching. It's rarely about dissatisfaction - it's about momentum fading without a prompt. A simple automated check-in sequence at days 10, 17, and 21 can recover a surprising number of those clients.
Week 2-3 ghosting isn't a client problem. It's a follow-up gap. Coaches who automate the check-in between sessions keep clients longer - not because the coaching changes, but because the silence doesn't stretch.
Learned this the hard way. Spent weeks negotiating with a wellness platform to list my coaching services. Turned out their 'marketplace' was a Shopify store selling gift boxes. Zero clients, zero track record. If I'd had my own pipeline, I would've walked away in week one instead of week five.
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Owning your pipeline changes every negotiation. When you're not dependent on someone else's platform for leads, you can evaluate partnerships objectively and walk away when the fit isn't right. Building that pipeline is unglamorous work - but it's the work that gives you options.
Five weeks on someone else's platform vs. five weeks building your own pipeline. One gives you regret, the other gives you leverage. The boring work of consistent follow-up and lead nurturing is the thing that makes you un-desperate.
Sunday 6 PM, no revenue, no replies. So I pulled the CRM, found 2 coaches with warm leads going cold, and sent follow-ups. That's the job. Not wait for the week to start. Fill the gap when you find it.
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This is the right instinct. The gap between a warm lead and a cold one is often just 48-72 hours of silence. Manually catching those is heroic but unsustainable - automating the follow-up cadence means those warm leads never sit long enough to cool down.
Good instinct, but you shouldn't need to catch cold leads on a Sunday evening. If the follow-up was automated, those two coaches would've been re-engaged on Thursday - before they went cold in the first place.
more copy isn't the answer. more aggression isn't the answer. more urgency isn't the answer. the answer is almost always less. less pressure. less noise. less friction. more trust. this goes against everything most founders have been taught about conversion.
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This applies perfectly to follow-up sequences too. The most effective follow-ups aren't louder - they're calmer, more useful, and better timed. A well-spaced sequence that gives value instead of pressure outperforms aggressive chasing every time.
This is exactly right, and it extends to follow-up. The best follow-up doesn't push - it shows up consistently and says something useful. Pressure creates avoidance. Patience with a system creates trust.