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Ask HN: Freelancers - What do you do when a client doesn't pay?

7 点作者 SkittlesNTwix大约 12 年前
A mashup of questions here -<p>I'm currently dealing with a situation where the contractually stated project-completion/payment date on a coding project has passed. How soon after a freelance project is completed, do you expect payment?<p>What steps do you take if a client simply doesn't pay you?<p>I'm not looking for official legal advice here. A summary of experiences and general advice would be very helpful.

5 条评论

trapexit大约 12 年前
Welcome to contract work!<p>Customers paying late is a fact of life, and from time to time you'll need to be persistent and/or agressive about collections.<p>Get in touch with your contact at the client company and let them know you haven't been paid for your work yet. Ask for a contact in their Accounts Payable department. Follow up with that person and make sure that your invoice got entered into their system. Make it clear to them that they're past due, and unless you receive payment on the next banking day that you will begin assessing the late fee you stipulated in your contract (you <i>did</i> stipulate a late fee, right?)<p>If you're dealing with quality clients, they'll almost never just try to stiff you on the payment; instead, it's because their accounting processes are completely disorganized (sometimes intentionally!). If your client isn't a large, trustworthy, stable company, always get your payment up-front. Even if they are a big company you trust, get an advance; it'll help tide you over while you're waiting for them to pay your net-15 invoice... net-90.<p>After consulting for more than four years, my past-due receivables balance (which at one point exceeded $200,000!) finally went to down to $0 only last week. And that's because I stopped taking on new work.<p>I've had customers who were nearly 90 days behind on payment (I used to be really bad / lazy about collections) and required almost a dozen followup emails and calls to get things straightened out. As far as I can tell, it was never out of outright malice, just the general disorganization and reluctance to part with cash that you find at big companies.<p><i>Don't</i> take any aggressive / adversarial actions until you've exhausted all the polite request options. Give them the benefit of a doubt (unless your contact is already the person who writes the checks, and has no excuse). Be polite, firm, and extremely persistent. Get a commitment that you will be paid before date X, and if you haven't been paid in full by then, assess your late fee and start calling / emailing on alternate days until you do get paid, or until your patience is exhausted. Get lawyers involved only as a last resort. And next time, get paid in advance. :)
relaunched大约 12 年前
I've posted this video a few times, recently. If you are a professional contractor / freelancer you should watch it.<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/22053820" rel="nofollow">http://vimeo.com/22053820</a> - Mike Monteiro - Fuck You, Pay Me!
artas_bartas大约 12 年前
In the past, I used several different strategies - it all depends on what type of client you have.<p>For greedy clients - give them a discount that is only valid if they pay up to a certain date.<p>For corporate clients - threaten to go online with a blog post/ social media story about how they screw freelancers.<p>For callous clients - yeah, delete the code or switch on a few unexpected "extras". The funnier extras, the better.<p>It's a good thing that you have a contract, though, should come in handy if things turn out nasty and you'll need a lawyer.
dylanhassinger大约 12 年前
delete the code, take down the site<p>name them in a blog post about this topic<p>sell the debt to a collection agency<p>call uncle vinnie to take care of it
ChrisLTD大约 12 年前
If a phone call or face-to-face meeting with the client doesn't solve the problem, you should take your contract to a lawyer and figure out your options.<p>Depending on the amount you're owed, it might not be worth the legal fees or time to fight it.