Won’t Get Fooled Again: An Insider’s Survival Guide to Protecting Your Freelance Payments
by Ewan MacKenna, co-founder & Editorial Director at Writers’ Bloc, and award-winning sports journalist.
You’ve just hit ‘send’ on your magnum opus: you’ve poured your heart into that article or book. Spent countless hours researching, writing, and polishing.
Then, the unthinkable happens: your publisher declares bankruptcy, leaving you high and dry, with nothing but an empty promise where your pay-cheque should be, a collection of unpaid invoices and a gnawing sense of powerlessness.
If you’re nodding along, you’re not alone.
As a freelance writer, like me, you’re part of a growing tribe of creators who’ve been burned. The freelance writing landscape is littered with tales of creators left in financial limbo, their hard-earned words seemingly evaporating into the ether along with their promised compensation. It’s a stark reality for many, albeit one rarely spoken of.
As we saw last week, 5 out of every 6 (83%) of freelancers* who we have surveyed, have experienced being left unpaid at least once, if not multiple times.
But it doesn’t have to be this way: you don’t have to be a victim in this story. Feel helpless no more, Writers’ Bloc has your back!
(*Derived from 200+ customer interviews).
Our team has been in the trenches. We’ve faced the same challenges you have, and we’ve developed battle-tested strategies to ensure you get paid your dues.
Here’s your roadmap to financial security in the freelance wilderness:
1. Forge Ironclad Contracts
Your first line of defence is a rock-solid contract. Here’s what you should include to make it unbreakable:
Payment terms: Specify exact amounts, deadlines, and late fees.
Kill fees: Ensure you’re compensated even if the project is cancelled.
Rights reversion: Detail how and when rights return to you if the publisher fails to pay.
Arbitration clause: Include a provision for dispute resolution to avoid costly court battles.
Readability: Use simple language – a contract that reads like a technical user manual is a contract that won’t get read.
Pro Tip: Have a lawyer / solicitor review your contract template. It’s an up-front investment that pays for itself later, often many times over.
2. Master the Art of Upfront Fees
Never start work without a deposit. Here’s how to make it standard practice:
For new clients: Request 50% upfront.
For ongoing relationships: Implement a rolling deposit system where the client always has one month’s worth of work prepaid.
Special tactics: Use language like “reservation fee” instead of “deposit” to psychologically anchor its non-refundable nature.
Industry Intel: Top-tier journalists often secure 30% upfront for long-form pieces. Don’t settle for less.
3. Digital Bodyguard: Leverage Technology for Payment Protection
Embrace tools designed to protect freelancers:
“There’s an App for That”: Use platforms like Bonsai (https://www.hellobonsai.com/), or AND.CO
(https://www.and.co/) for contract creation and invoice tracking.
Escrow services: Consider escrow services for large projects, or for complex, long-duration
investigations / analyses.
Escrow.com (https://www.escrow.com/) is a reputable option.
5. Know Your Rights, Know the Limits
Knowledge is power – Arm yourself:
Know Your Jurisdiction: For example, if you are based out of New York, it’s a good idea to familiarise yourself with the Freelance Isn’t Free Act in NYC (https://www1.nyc.gov/site/dca/about/freelance-isnt-free-act.page), and similar legislation in your area.
Join A Group: There are professional organisations like the Authors Guild (https://www.authorsguild.org/) for legal resources and contract reviews.
In the UK: Impress Reg (https://www.impressorg.com/) is the independent regulator, who support writers, journalists and publishers.
In the EU: the European Federation of Journalists (https://europeanjournalists.org/) and JournalismFund EU (https://www.journalismfund.eu/) support freelance and independent journalists in Europe.
Embrace tools designed to protect freelancers:
“There’s an App for That”: Use platforms like Bonsai (https://www.hellobonsai.com/), or AND.CO (https://www.and.co/) for contract creation and invoice tracking.
Escrow services: Consider escrow services for large projects, or for complex, long-duration investigations / analyses.
Escrow.com (https://www.escrow.com/) is a reputable option.
4. Your Financial Fortress: Diversify Revenue & Build a Financial Cushion
Protect yourself from client insolvency by diversifying your income:
Don’t Put All Your Eggs in One Basket: Aim to have no single client represent more than 20% of your income.
Save For A Rainy Day: Maintain a 3-6 month emergency fund to weather payment delays.
Content Is King: Explore passive income streams like creating a writing course or ebook. Sure, you have to do a lot of work up-front in the short-term – but once it is done, you continue to reap the benefits long-term, without having to continuously re-do the work.
Pro Tip: We suggest to aim for the 20/20/60 rule. 20% bread-and-butter clients, 20% dream projects, 60% steady gigs. This balance helped one Writers’ Bloc member weather a major publisher’s bankruptcy filing without missing a mortgage payment.
6. Perfect the Art of the Payment Process
Due process and routine are your friends, but adhere to them. Don’t go soft, and don’t let late payments slide:
Set Up Early: Set up automated reminders well ahead of time for invoice due dates. The expert freelancers tend to set multiple reminders which track the entire escalation process – better to have them set and not need them, rather than the inverse.
Robo-cop: Have a escalation plan: 1. friendly reminder → 2. formal notice → 3. legal letter.
Tool Mastery: Use tools like Cushion (https://cushionapp.com/) to track late payments and automate follow-ups.
Insider Tactic: Create a “priority client” status with preferential terms for prompt payers.
7. Strength in Unity: Cultivate a Professional Network
Your peers are your greatest asset; help them and they’ll help you:
Communities & Groups: Join writer groups on platforms like Facebook’s Freelance Writers (https://www.facebook.com/groups/freelancewriters/) to share experiences and warnings about non-paying clients.
Skin in the Game: Contribute to and consult resources like the Who Pays Writers database (https://whopayswriters.com/).
Dig the Well Before You’re Thirsty: You get out of these groups what you put into them. This follows for the community as a whole – become a ‘net contributor‘ to harness the full power of network effects. Be the colleague you wish you had when starting out.
8. Develop a ‘Spidey Sense‘ for Red Flags
Learn to spot trouble before it starts:
Do your own research: Research potential clients on platforms like Glassdoor (https://www.glassdoor.com/) for employee reviews.
Ask your peers for advice: Check around with your network if anyone has previously worked with the prospective client.
Set clear parameters in advance: Be wary of clients pushing for rushed deadlines without clear payment terms.
No such thing as a ‘Free Lunch‘: Trust your gut—if something feels off, it probably is.
Counter-Argument Buster: On the point of being firm when setting upfront parameters, we often hear “But I need the work!“. This is a fallacy, avoid being fooled. Short-term gain often leads to long-term pain. Patience pays-off. Be Patient.
It’s important for you to recognise that you’re not just a writer or journalist—you’re a business. Act like it, and you’ll be treated accordingly.
The Power of Collective Action
Remember, you’re part of a community. By sharing your experiences—both positive and negative—you contribute to a safer, more transparent freelancing environment for all.
Consider investigating resources like the Freelance Solidarity Project (https://www.freelancesolidarity.org/) to amplify your voice and protect your peers. They are also very grateful for any contributions.
Navigating the financial uncertainties of freelance writing isn’t just about survival—it’s about thriving on your own terms. By implementing these strategies, you’re not just protecting your payments; you’re asserting your worth as a professional and contributing to a more equitable industry for all writers.
Have a payment war story or a winning strategy? How did you feel at the time? What did you do about it? How did you resolve the problem?
Share it in the comments, or with #WritersGetPaid. Or, share the article with someone who needs it—your experience could be the lifeline another writer needs today.
Remember: Your words have value. Your time has value. You have value. Never let anyone convince you otherwise.