The invoice is the end of the process, but most payment problems start at the beginning — with the quote. If your quote was vague, your invoice will be disputed. If your quote was clear and approved, your invoice is simply a confirmation of what was already agreed.
This guide outlines the full workflow: from creating a quote to receiving payment, with no ambiguity at any stage.
The Difference Between a Quote and an Invoice
The distinction is simple but important:
- A quote (or estimate) is a proposal: "This is what I'll do, and this is what it will cost." It happens before the work.
- An invoice is a demand: "I did this work, and this is what you owe me." It happens after the work is complete.
They look nearly identical — same business details, same line items, same totals. The difference is the stage of the project they represent, and the words that change: "Quote" instead of "Invoice", "Valid Until" instead of "Due Date".
Why You Should Always Start With a Quote
Skipping the quote is the most common cause of scope creep, payment disputes, and uncomfortable "I didn't know it would be that much" conversations.
- A signed or acknowledged quote protects you from scope creep — you have a document that defines exactly what was agreed.
- It gives the client an opportunity to say "this is too much" before any work starts — far less painful for both sides.
- It creates a paper trail. When the invoice arrives and a client questions the cost, you can point to the approved quote.
- Clients who have reviewed and approved a quote are mentally prepared for the invoice amount. The payment feels like an expected conclusion, not a surprise.
The Full Quote → Invoice Workflow
Handling Deposits
For larger projects, requesting a deposit upfront — typically 25–50% of the total — significantly changes the client relationship.
A deposit is a financial commitment. Once paid, the client has skin in the game. Ghosting becomes much less likely. The working relationship starts with mutual accountability rather than you carrying all the risk.
ZeroForm's Quote mode includes a deposit percentage field. Set it to 50%, and the quote automatically shows the deposit amount due now, and the balance due on completion.
What If the Scope Changes?
Scope changes happen. The client adds a page. They want an extra revision round. The brief expands.
Handle changes with a simple process: stop, document the addition, send a quick email confirming the change and the additional cost, and wait for a "yes" before continuing.
Adding a separate line item on your final invoice — clearly labelled "Additional work: [description] — approved [date]" — handles most disputes before they escalate.
Never absorb scope changes silently. It creates resentment, and ironically, the client never even knows they received extra value.
ZeroForm Does Both, Seamlessly
Switch between Invoice and Quote mode in a single click from the document type selector at the top of the form. Your line items, rates, and details carry over. The document title, date labels, and deposit field update automatically to match the document type.
Quote your client today. Invoice them when the work is done. No new tool, no new account, no extra workflow.