If you've ever had to chase a client for payment, you know the feeling. You send the invoice, the due date passes, and then you're left wondering: do I send a reminder and risk seeming pushy, or do I wait and risk looking like a pushover?
For most small businesses, late invoices aren't just awkward — they're a genuine cash flow problem. And yet, most business owners handle them manually: writing individual follow-up emails, tracking due dates in spreadsheets, and dreading every uncomfortable conversation.
There's a better way. Automated invoice follow-ups handle the reminders for you — consistently, professionally, and without any of the awkwardness.
29%
of invoices are paid late by small business clients
14 days
average time spent chasing payments per month
3×
more likely to get paid when reminders are sent within 7 days of due date
Why manual invoice follow-ups fail
The problem with manual follow-ups isn't that business owners don't care — it's that they're inconsistent. When you're busy, chasing invoices is the last thing on your mind. You remember when cash is tight, forget when it isn't, and end up with a chaotic mix of overdue invoices that never got followed up on.
Automated reminders solve this by making follow-ups happen on a schedule regardless of how busy you are. The key milestones where reminders actually change behaviour are:
- 7 days overdue — most late payments at this stage are genuinely forgotten, not malicious. A quick reminder resolves them immediately.
- 14 days overdue — if they haven't paid after the first reminder, a second follow-up signals that you're tracking this seriously.
- 30 days overdue — at this point you need to escalate. An automated 30-day reminder often prompts a conversation about payment plans or resolves a dispute that was sitting unaddressed.
The psychology of automated reminders: Automated follow-ups actually feel less personal and therefore less awkward — for both sides. Clients know it's a system, not you personally calling them out, which makes it easier for them to respond without embarrassment.
What to include in an invoice follow-up email
A good payment reminder email is short, professional, and gives the client everything they need to pay immediately. Here's what to include:
- Invoice number — so they can find it immediately
- Amount due — clearly stated
- Original due date — not accusatory, just informational
- Days overdue — specific number creates urgency without aggression
- A clear call to action — "please arrange payment at your earliest convenience"
- Your reply email — so they can respond if there's an issue
What to leave out: anything that sounds threatening, overly apologetic, or complicated. The best follow-up emails are boring on purpose — they convey professionalism and seriousness without emotion.
Setting up automated invoice reminders
You have a few options for automating invoice follow-ups depending on your current setup:
Option 1: Your accounting software
If you use QuickBooks, Xero, or FreshBooks, all three have built-in automatic reminder features. The limitation is that they're tied to your invoicing workflow — if you issue invoices outside your accounting software, or if you want reminders to go to multiple people on your team, you'll hit the ceiling quickly.
Option 2: A dedicated tool like WorkLess
WorkLess lets you import overdue invoices from any source — including a CSV export from your accounting software — and sends automatic payment reminders at 7, 14, and 30 day milestones. You can send reminders to yourself (to follow up manually) or directly to your clients, and configure up to 5 team members to receive copies of every alert.
The advantage over accounting software is flexibility: it works regardless of where your invoices live, and the reminders are sent to your whole team automatically — no one has to remember to check.
Option 3: Email templates + calendar reminders
If you're not ready for automation, at minimum set up a calendar reminder to check your overdue invoices every Monday morning and a set of saved email templates for 7, 14, and 30 day follow-ups. It's manual, but it's consistent — which is the important part.
Sending reminders directly to clients vs. just to yourself
Automated tools typically give you a choice: send the reminder to yourself (so you can forward or call), or send it directly to the client.
The right answer depends on your client relationship:
- Send to yourself first — best for long-term or high-value clients where the relationship matters and you want to control the tone of every interaction
- Send directly to client — best for one-off projects or clients with whom you have a transactional relationship
- Send to both — best when you want the client to see it AND you want your own copy to follow up if needed
A note on tone: Automated client-facing reminders should always include a reply-to address so the client can respond if there's a dispute or they need to discuss payment terms. An email with no reply path feels impersonal and can damage relationships you've spent years building.
What to do when reminders don't work
Automation gets most invoices paid, but not all. If an invoice reaches 30+ days with no response, it's time for a direct conversation — phone call or in-person meeting. No email, automated or otherwise, substitutes for a real conversation when a client is genuinely struggling or deliberately avoiding payment.
At 60+ days, you should consider a formal demand letter and potentially a collections process. Automated systems can flag these for you, but the resolution is always human.
The bottom line
Invoice follow-ups are one of the highest-value things you can automate as a small business. The setup takes less than 30 minutes, and the time saved — plus the cash flow improvement — compounds every month. The awkwardness of chasing clients goes away almost entirely when the reminder is systematic rather than personal.
Import your overdue invoices, set your reminders, and let the system do the uncomfortable part. You built your business to do great work — not to write collections emails.
Try invoice automation with WorkLess
Import your overdue invoices from QuickBooks, Xero, or any CSV. WorkLess sends automatic reminders at 7, 14, and 30 days — to you, your team, or directly to your clients.
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