invoice status & payment follow-up

Invoice status and payment follow-up for land surveyors

It is hard to see at a glance which invoices are sent, paid, due, or overdue, so follow-up slips and money goes uncollected. For land surveyors billing clients, the open list is only as good as the record behind it. Cash Workspace gives you one place to record each item, attach its file, and keep it where you can find it. It is free.

The problem

Why land surveyors lose track

It is hard to see at a glance which invoices are sent, paid, due, or overdue, so follow-up slips and money goes uncollected.

  • Logging stakes, caps, and paint as one lump instead of splitting them across the jobs that consumed them, so no job's real cost is visible
  • Filing the signed plat but keeping the field notes and deed research somewhere else, breaking up the set that backs the survey
  • Mixing personal truck fuel with field-truck fuel so the per-job vehicle cost becomes unusable

The workflow

How land surveyors keep it organized

A simple, repeatable way to invoice tracking records without special software.

  1. 1

    List every invoice you have sent

    Put each invoice you have issued to clients into one place with its number, client, amount, and the date you sent it.

  2. 2

    Give each invoice a status

    Mark each one sent, paid, due, or overdue so the ones that need attention stand out from the ones that are done.

  3. 3

    Track the due date and follow-up

    Note when each invoice is due and, when one passes its date, record that you followed up and when — the follow-up is something you send, the workspace just keeps the record.

  4. 4

    Match payments to invoices as they arrive

    When a payment lands in your account, mark that invoice paid and file it, so the open list only ever shows what is genuinely outstanding.

Record structure

What each record holds

The fields that make a invoice tracking record complete and findable.

Invoice number
Your reference for the invoice, so records and follow-ups line up.
Client
Who owes the amount, so you can group by client.
Amount
What the invoice is for.
Sent date
When you issued it — the start of the payment clock.
Due date
When payment is expected, so overdue is obvious.
Status
Sent, paid, due, or overdue — the single field that drives your follow-up list.
Job number
Links the expense to a specific survey job so each job's true cost is visible.
Parcel / APN
The assessor parcel number the field work covers, for grouping records by property.
Survey type
Boundary, topographic, ALTA, or construction staking — so costs sort by the kind of work.
Field crew / day
Which crew and field day incurred the cost, for splitting supplies across jobs.

Example setup

An example structure

One way land surveyors can lay this out in Cash Workspace.

Open

Every invoice still due or overdue for your clients, sorted by due date.

By client

One folder per client so their invoices and follow-up history stay together.

Paid / archived

Settled invoices moved out of the open list once payment has cleared.

Common mistakes

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Logging stakes, caps, and paint as one lump instead of splitting them across the jobs that consumed them, so no job's real cost is visible
  • Filing the signed plat but keeping the field notes and deed research somewhere else, breaking up the set that backs the survey
  • Mixing personal truck fuel with field-truck fuel so the per-job vehicle cost becomes unusable
  • Forgetting to attach the county recorder receipt to the record-research expense, then not remembering which parcel it was for
  • Keeping equipment calibration certificates loose instead of with the repair-and-calibration expense record
  • Keeping the list of sent invoices only in your head, so a due one slips.

How it helps

How Cash Workspace helps

Record it, don’t re-key it

Enter each item once — date, vendor, amount, category — and attach the file to that record. No bank sync, no receipt-reading; the record is deliberate and yours.

One consistent structure

The same categories and folders every month, so land surveyors always know where a record goes and where to find it later.

Status at a glance

Sent, due, paid, overdue — the status field drives your follow-up list. You send the follow-up; the workspace keeps the record.

FAQ

Questions people ask

Does it chase late payments for me?
No. Cash Workspace does not send reminders or chase payments for you. It shows which invoices are due or overdue so you know who to follow up with, and it keeps a record of the follow-ups you send.
Does Cash Workspace process payments?
No. Cash Workspace does not process payments or connect to a payment provider. It records the status of each invoice — sent, due, paid, overdue — so your outstanding list stays accurate as money arrives.
How do I record a partial payment?
Note the amount received and the date against the invoice and keep its status as due until the balance is settled. The record shows what is still outstanding without changing what the invoice was for.
How do I know which invoices to follow up first?
Sort by due date so the oldest overdue invoices surface first, and use the status field to separate the ones that genuinely need a follow-up from the ones already settled.

How follow-up works here

Cash Workspace records each invoice’s status and keeps your follow-up history in one place. It does not process payments, connect to your bank, or send reminders for you. You decide when to follow up and send it yourself; the workspace keeps the record of what was sent and when.

Organize your invoice tracking records

Cash Workspace is a free place for land surveyors to keep invoices and their statuses organized. Start a workspace and set it up your way.