the anatomy of a well designed invoice
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The Anatomy of a Well Designed Invoice
Now that youve drummed up some business as a freelancer, a web design and development shop, or a creative agency, its time to start collecting money owed. Billing clients is easily done with an invoice. If you use an accounting program like QuickBooks or an online project management application like Intervals, they will create an invoice for you. However, if you want to design your own invoice take a look at the example below along with the details of what should be included on an invoice. This design is based on a free invoice template from Adobe.
1) Your Identity and Address
Include your logo and address in this space so the client knows who is invoicing them and where to send the check.
2) Date and Invoice Number
The date is important as it tells the client when the invoice was issued. The invoice number is used by both the client and the designer to reference the invoice. Both of these fields are important for getting paid on time.
3) Client Name and Address
This is usually the part you see sticking out the plastic window on the front of the envelope. Most invoices are sent electronically these days, however, this information is still important to avoid any confusion.
4) Terms
These can be whatever you want them to be, though we recommend issuing all invoices as due upon receipt.
5) Purchase Order Number (optional)
Useful if your creative agency commonly issues purchase orders. This field is rarely used in web design and development.
6) Project
Include the project name to differentiate this invoice from one the client may have already received from another project. It is common to work on several projects for one client. This field helps simplify billing.
7) Line Items
This itemized breakdown details what is being billed. In the case of this example, the invoice was for the total owed on a design and development time and materials maintenance contract. These line items could also include hours worked, milestone payments on a flat-bid, or project expenses.
8) Description (optional)
A description of work can be useful for summarizing the invoice for the client.
9) Total Due
The invoice total is the most important number on the invoice.
Check out the Intervals blog for more articles
The Intervals Blog
A collection of useful tips, tales and opinions based on decades of collective experience designing and developing web sites and web-based applications.
www.myintervals.com/blog
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