Tag: getting paid

  • Essential Steps to Getting Paid Online (No Matter What)

    Essential Steps to Getting Paid Online (No Matter What)

    As a freelancer or business owner, you’ve likely faced the frustrating situation of completing work only for a client to delay or decline payment. That feeling of “turmoil” is all too real.

    But what if you could prevent this? Establishing a clear and efficient online payment procedure isn’t just about getting paid; it’s about protecting your time, effort, and bottom line.

    black payment terminal
    Photo by energepic.com on Pexels.com

    In this post, I will walk you through the essential steps to ensuring you get paid reliably online, every time.

    Step 1: Lay the Foundation with a Solid Written Agreement

    The very first, and arguably most critical, step in ensuring you get paid reliably online is to formalize your working relationship.

    Don’t just verbally agree on terms; create a comprehensive written agreement, whether it’s a formal contract or detailed terms of service published on your website and agreed to by the client.

    selective focus photography of person signing on paper
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    This isn’t about being overly rigid; it’s about establishing clear expectations and demonstrating your professionalism. Your agreement should meticulously outline the scope of work you will deliver, the specific information, assets, or access the client must provide for you to complete the project successfully (and the implications if they don’t).

    Furthermore, break down the cost of your service clearly, detailing what the client is paying for.

    Crucially, this is where you define your payment terms: specify the total amount due, any deposit requirements, payment milestones (if applicable), the deadline for payment (e.g. within 7 days), acceptable online payment methods, and the exact process the client needs to follow to submit payment.

    Having all of this in writing and agreed upon upfront significantly reduces the likelihood of misunderstandings and provides a clear reference point if any payment issues arise.

    Step 2: Ask For Not Less Than 50% Upfront Commitment Fee/ Down-payment

    Implementing a policy of requesting a commitment fee or down payment, ideally around 50% of the total project cost, is a crucial step in safeguarding your income as a freelancer or business owner operating online.

    This isn’t about a lack of trust in your clients; rather, it’s a standard professional practice that offers significant benefits for both parties and drastically reduces your risk of non-payment.

    Here’s why this step is so vital:

    Demonstrates Client Commitment

    When a client is willing to invest financially upfront, it immediately signals their seriousness and commitment to the project. This helps filter out potential clients who may not be fully invested or might be more likely to disappear before paying.

    Provides Essential Operating Capital

    Freelancing and running an online business often involve initial expenses, whether it’s software subscriptions, necessary tools, or simply the time invested in initial planning and setup before the main work is completed. A 50% deposit helps cover these upfront costs, ensuring you’re not out-of-pocket while you deliver the service.

    Reduces Your Financial Risk

    In the unfortunate event that a client becomes unresponsive or cancels the project midway, having received a significant portion of the payment upfront provides a safety net. It ensures you are compensated for at least a substantial part of the work and time invested, mitigating the impact of potential non-payment.

    Improves Cash Flow

    Waiting until a project is 100% complete to receive any payment can create unpredictable income streams. An upfront deposit provides an immediate influx of cash, helping you manage your business finances more effectively and providing greater stability.

    Sets a Professional Tone

    Clearly stating your requirement for a deposit in your initial terms and contract (as outlined in Step 1) reinforces your position as a professional business with established procedures. It sets a clear expectation from the outset and helps prevent awkward payment conversations later.

    This 50% figure is a common starting point, striking a balance between securing significant commitment and not being an unreasonable burden on the client.

    Depending on the nature and length of your projects, you might adjust this percentage, but the principle of getting a portion of the payment upfront remains a cornerstone of getting paid reliably online. Ensure this requirement is clearly stated in your contract and discussed with the client before any work commences.

    Step 3: Leverage Safe and Integrated Payment Gateways to Build Trust

    Once your terms are clear and you’ve secured a commitment fee, the next critical step is to make the actual payment process as smooth, professional, and secure as possible for your clients.

    This is where integrating safe and reputable payment gateways directly into your website or workflow becomes invaluable.

    a person using her laptop while holding a credit card
    Photo by Pavel Danilyuk on Pexels.com

    Think of a payment gateway as the digital equivalent of a point-of-sale terminal in a physical store. It’s the technology that securely authorizes and processes online payments, acting as a bridge between your website, your client’s bank, and your business bank account.

    But it’s not just about functionality; the choice and integration of your payment gateway significantly impact client trust – you are, in essence, using it to “buy” their confidence.

    Here’s why this step is essential:

    Enhances Security and Professionalism

    Reputable payment gateways employ advanced security measures like encryption and fraud detection. By using them, you signal to your clients that you prioritize the safety of their sensitive financial information.

    A clunky or insecure payment process can be a major red flag for clients and lead to abandoned payments. A professional, integrated gateway reassures them that their transaction is protected.

    Creates a Seamless User Experience

    Ideally, your clients should be able to pay you directly on your website or through a secure, branded payment link without being redirected to an unfamiliar third-party site. Seamless integration of a payment gateway provides a smooth and consistent experience, reducing friction and increasing the likelihood of timely payment.

    Offers Multiple Payment Options

    Leading payment gateways support a variety of payment methods, including major credit cards, debit cards, and sometimes digital wallets or bank transfers. Offering your clients their preferred payment method adds convenience and further builds trust by accommodating their needs.

    Automates and Streamlines the Process

    Integrated payment gateways automate much of the payment process, from authorization to transfer, reducing manual effort and potential errors. This efficiency benefits both you and your client.

    Builds Credibility

    Associating your business with well-known and trusted payment gateway brands (like Pesapal, PayPal, Wise, Stripe, Square, etc.) lends credibility to your operation. Clients are often more comfortable paying through gateways they recognize and trust.

    By carefully selecting and integrating a safe payment gateway, you’re not just setting up a mechanism to receive funds; you’re actively building a trustworthy and professional image that encourages clients to pay confidently and promptly.

    Step 4: Exceed Expectations – Give it Your All and Deliver Exceptional Quality

    While the previous steps focused on setting up clear terms and robust payment systems, this step hones in on the absolute cornerstone of consistent online income: the quality of your work.

    No matter how well you’ve drafted your contract or how seamless your payment gateway is, consistently delivering high-quality results is paramount to getting paid without hassle and building a sustainable online business.

    Think of the payment you receive as a direct reflection of the value you provide. When you “give it your all” and deliver exceptional quality, you not only fulfill the obligations outlined in your initial agreement (Step 1), but you also build significant goodwill and trust with your clients. This goes beyond simply meeting expectations; it’s about exceeding them whenever possible.

    Here’s why delivering top-notch quality is so critical for getting paid:

    Justifies Your Value and Price

    High-quality work clearly demonstrates the value you bring to the client and justifies your fees. When clients are genuinely impressed with the results, they are far less likely to question the cost or delay payment. Your work becomes its own compelling argument for timely compensation.

    Minimizes Disputes and Revisions

    Poor quality or work that doesn’t align with the agreed-upon scope is the primary reason for client dissatisfaction and payment disputes. By focusing on excellence from the outset, you reduce the need for extensive revisions and the potential for disagreements over whether the work was delivered as promised.

    Builds Trust and Credibility (Reinforcing Step 3)

    Just as a secure payment gateway builds trust in the transaction process, delivering consistent quality builds trust in your abilities and reliability as a service provider or business. This reinforces the professional image you’ve worked to cultivate and makes clients more confident in continuing to do business with you and, crucially, paying you on time.

    Generates Repeat Business and Referrals

    Satisfied clients who are thrilled with the quality of your work are your best advocates. They are highly likely to become repeat customers and refer new business to you. This creates a virtuous cycle where your commitment to quality directly leads to more opportunities to get paid.

    Creates a Positive Reputation

    In the online world, reputation is everything. Consistently delivering high-quality work builds a strong positive reputation, making you a sought-after professional. This can give you more leverage in setting your terms and attracting clients who value quality and are willing to pay for it.

    Ultimately, while contracts and payment systems provide the framework, the actual exchange of value happens through the quality of your deliverables. By committing to excellence in every project, you not only honor your agreement but also proactively reduce potential payment friction and lay the foundation for long-term success and financial consistency in your online endeavors.

    Step 5: Cultivate Social Proof – Don’t Let Happy Clients Leave Without a Review

    You’ve set clear terms, secured an upfront payment, implemented a smooth payment gateway, and delivered exceptional quality (Steps 1-4). Now it’s time to leverage that positive experience to build a powerful tool for future payments: social proof.

    This step is all about actively encouraging your happy clients to share their positive experiences through reviews and testimonials.

    close up of a smartphone screen displaying a pexels app in apple store
    Photo by Bastian Riccardi on Pexels.com

    In the online world, trust is currency, and social proof is gold. Potential clients looking for freelance services or online businesses rely heavily on the experiences of others to make their decisions.

    They want to know that you are reliable, deliver on your promises, and provide genuine value. Positive reviews act as powerful endorsements, validating your expertise and significantly influencing a potential client’s comfort level in hiring you and, crucially, in trusting you with their payment information.

    Here’s why actively seeking reviews is essential for consistent online payments:

    Builds Credibility and Authority

    A collection of positive reviews across different platforms (your website, Google My Business, social media, industry-specific sites) immediately builds your credibility with new prospects. It shows that others have trusted you and had positive outcomes, making you a more attractive and less risky choice.

    Increases Trust in the Payment Process

    When potential clients see that others have successfully worked with you and were satisfied, it extends their trust to the entire interaction, including the payment process. Knowing that happy customers have navigated your payment system and received quality work reduces anxiety for new clients when it’s time to pay.

    Acts as Powerful Marketing

    Positive reviews are authentic, third-party endorsements that are often more persuasive than your own marketing copy. They highlight the real-world benefits of working with you and can attract clients who are a good fit and are likely to value your services – and thus pay for them willingly.

    Provides Valuable Feedback (and Helps You Improve)

    While the focus here is on getting paid, the reviews themselves also offer invaluable insights into what you’re doing well and areas where you could improve. This feedback loop helps you maintain and even enhance the quality of your services (Step 4), further reducing future payment issues.

    Reduces Hesitation for New Clients

    For someone considering hiring you for the first time, seeing positive testimonials from satisfied clients can be the final push they need to commit. This reduces their hesitation and makes the initial payment (like the commitment fee in Step 2) feel less like a gamble and more like a worthwhile investment.

    How to Ask for Reviews Effectively

    Timing is key. Ask for a review when the client is happiest – immediately after successfully delivering the final product or service, or after they’ve expressed genuine satisfaction. Make it easy for them by providing a direct link to where you’d like them to leave the review. Personalize your request, reminding them of the specific positive outcome you helped them achieve.

    Where to Showcase Your Reviews

    Strategically display testimonials on your website, particularly on your homepage, services pages, and a dedicated testimonials page. Share them on your social media channels and include snippets in your proposals or email signatures. The more visible your positive social proof is, the more it will work for you in building trust and encouraging timely payments from new clients.

    By making the collection and showcasing of positive client feedback a standard part of your process, you leverage the power of social proof to attract better clients, build trust, and ultimately ensure you get paid online consistently and reliably.

    Conclusion

    Getting paid reliably online as a freelancer or business owner doesn’t have to be a source of stress. By implementing these five essential steps – from setting clear terms and securing upfront commitment to delivering exceptional quality and leveraging positive reviews – you build a robust system that minimizes risk and fosters trust. Follow this guide consistently, and you’ll pave the way for predictable income, stronger client relationships, and the sustainable growth of your online business.

    Did I miss a step? Let me know in the comments section.

    And if you need video production services, let me know here. Alternatively, you can visit our company website here.

    Follow me on social media @cheptionymutai.

  • How to Deal With Offline Clients Who go For Months or Years Without Paying

    It’s exciting when you hear how people start as freelancers then turn their experience into something beyond just freelancing- an online business enterprise. The beauty about the process is – you never know when it happens because you are having fun while at it.

    Video Summary Part 1

    That’s why if you are freelancer, you should be proud of yourself and what you are doing. It takes courage to commit freelancing as a full time job. In Africa, people will not take you serious if you tell them you are a full time freelancer and you are not attached to any company. Its really hard to explain to everyone what Freelancing is especially to the old school folks aka industrial age guys.

    And this takes me to my point of the today’s blog-posts – dealing with offline clients. In many occasions, you will manage to convince the ‘old school’ folks to give you business by showing them the portfolio of the services that you are providing.

    And when they buy your idea, you carry out the business offline.

    Why You Decide to Handle Their Offers Offline

    Owing to their unwillingness to take time to understand how the online freelance economy works, you offer to serve them offline since they are ready to give you business. Unlike the online platforms where someone funds the escrow before the contract- with the offline ecosystem, you work on a written signed and stamped L.P.O (local purchase order) from the company you are working for. This confirms that you have order with the company you are working with.

    What Makes People Excited to Work on Offline Projects

    There are many reasons to this. One of the the top reasons is because of the budget involved. Usually, offline projects pays 2-3 times the amount you could have received online from a Freelancing site. The risks are less when the project is completed offline and two parties know each other.

    Another reason is – direct human contact. You know where the company offices are and you can go there personally in case there is a payment delay and vice versa.

    The problem comes when people overlook the downside of this type of projects or contracts which is the risky part.

    What People Overlook

    First thing is, the time it takes for one to receive payment after completing the contract. This is not determined when you start the job-you just use estimates. Even if you complete the job to satisfaction, you will still need to give the company a grace period of 30 days to process your payment. The 30 days may extend to even 3 months or 1 year if its a government entity you are dealing with.


    On the other hand, if you are dealing with an individual, then that will depend of many things. Individuals are the most difficult ones. They may take many months or years before they pay you. I have a client who has taken 6 years before coming to take their wedding DVD.

    You can imagine, if 90% percent of the clients you serve don’t pay you on time, how will you survive? It’s really hard. You have bills to pay and new projects to finance.

    Dealing with clients indebted to you

    Video Review

    If it’s a government agency

    First things first, if it’s a government agency, the furthest you can go is writing notification letters to procurement departments to look into your payments as a priority. Make sure you have followed the right procurement procedures like writing a delivery note, and submitting the invoice for your payment to be processed. Sometimes, the approval process is long in some arms of government because of security measures.

    If it’s a private company

    If it’s a private company or an individual, propose to have a non-disclosure contract to be signed by both parties at the beginning of the contract.

    This way, you can have clauses within the contract that defines how you will be paid. You can propose to be paid after certain milestones have been reached.

    Most private companies are flexible when it comes to making payments as long as you have completed work to satisfaction. But an N.D.A is very important to have in handy for reference when requesting for payments.

    Other Approaches to Get you Payment After a Long Duration time – more than 6 months

    1. Don’t get angry. Anger will not get you anywhere unless it’s rightly directed. For example, you cannot start threatening a government Agency or a company because you are desperate for money. If you have to do it, have a plan so that sounds professional.
    2. Give them a window period for them to settle your payment – First, do this on e-mail or physical signed letter then follow it up with a phone call to make them take action on your request. Be as professional in your conversation as you can.
    3. For the cases where you did not deliver final project files – Use them as a hook to demand for payment. If say after 1 year, the client finds an urgency of using the project you completed and starts pressuring you to deliver- ask them to pay you first. That’s the only way you will get paid by this type of client.
    4. Destroy the files or delete them from your system but first inform your client 30 days prior. This way, if you take action, they will be aware of it.
    5. Put a penalty on projects not paid for and collected within your stipulated duration. For instance, you may say – if you don’t pick your project within the next 3 months, it will attract a penalty of 10% every month of the cost of the project.

    This is an issue that requires a lot of creative approach. Otherwise, you will not be paid and you will fall into a lot of debt. Always stay positive and use positive language always.

    And that’s it from me.

    Until next time, bye bye and take care. And if you need help to create and produce professional screen-cast videos, let me know here.

    Follow me on twitter @cheptiony