project & client finance records

Client and project finance records for real estate photographers

When income and costs for a client or project are spread across tools, it is impossible to see what a job actually involved without hunting through everything. For real estate photographers, the fix is a consistent place to keep the records rather than a smarter tool. 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 real estate photographers lose track

When income and costs for a client or project are spread across tools, it is impossible to see what a job actually involved without hunting through everything.

  • Tracking expenses by calendar day instead of by property, so you cannot see what a single listing cost to shoot.
  • Not tagging invoices with the agent or brokerage, so repeat-client billing gets tangled.
  • Forgetting to record travel between multiple listings shot on the same day.

The workflow

How real estate photographers keep it organized

A simple, repeatable way to project records records without special software.

  1. 1

    Give each client or project its own folder

    Create one place per client or project so everything about listing shoots lives together instead of being scattered.

  2. 2

    File its invoices and its costs side by side

    Keep the project's invoices and the expenses it ran up in the same folder, so income records and cost records sit next to each other for you to review.

  3. 3

    Attach the agreement and key documents

    Keep the client agreement, scope, and any change notes with the finance records so the full picture is in one place.

  4. 4

    Close the folder at project end

    When the work wraps, confirm the records are complete and archive the folder so it stays a clean reference.

Record structure

What each record holds

The fields that make a project records record complete and findable.

Client / project
The organizing tag everything is filed under.
Record type
Invoice, expense, or document — what the entry is.
Amount
The figure on the record.
Date
When it happened, for ordering within the project.
Attachment
The invoice, receipt, or agreement kept with the record.
Property address
The listing the record ties to, so everything shot for one property groups together.
Agent / brokerage
The client the shoot was for, so a repeat agent's jobs stay under one name.
Listing / MLS number
A stable reference for the shoot, useful when the same address returns to market.
Shoot date
When the listing was photographed, kept apart from when gear or fuel was paid for.

Example setup

An example structure

One way real estate photographers can lay this out in Cash Workspace.

Listing shoot — invoices

Every invoice raised for that listing shoot.

Listing shoot — expenses

The costs that job ran up — Drone & aerial gear, Wide-angle & interior lenses, and Vehicle fuel & mileage — with receipts.

Listing shoot — documents

The agreement, scope, and any change notes kept alongside the finance records.

Common mistakes

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Tracking expenses by calendar day instead of by property, so you cannot see what a single listing cost to shoot.
  • Not tagging invoices with the agent or brokerage, so repeat-client billing gets tangled.
  • Forgetting to record travel between multiple listings shot on the same day.
  • Keeping drone-battery and gear receipts loose instead of with the shoot they support.
  • Filing invoices by address only, so the same agent's jobs scatter across dozens of folders.
  • Mixing one client’s costs into another’s folder.

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 real estate photographers always know where a record goes and where to find it later.

Income and cost side by side

A project’s invoices and expenses in one folder for you to review. “Project” is an organizing tag, not a computed profit figure.

FAQ

Questions people ask

Does it calculate project profit?
No. Cash Workspace does not calculate profit, margin, or ROI. It keeps a project’s income and cost records side by side for you to review and draw your own conclusions.
How does project tagging work?
Each record is tagged with its client or project so everything about one job files together. The tag is an organizing convention, not a computed figure.
How do I keep each client’s records separate?
Give each client or project its own folder so invoices, expenses, and documents for that job stay together and never mix with another client’s records.
What should I do when a project closes?
Confirm the folder holds every invoice, expense, and document for the job, add any closing note, and archive it so it stays a clean reference you can return to.

Records side by side, not a calculator

Cash Workspace keeps a client or project’s income records and cost records side by side for you to review. It does not calculate profit, margin, or ROI, and “project” is an organizing tag rather than a computed figure. You see the records; the judgement stays with you.

Organize your project records records

Cash Workspace is a free place for real estate photographers to keep records and their files organized. Start a workspace and set it up your way.