InvoiceUp is live. It does one thing: when a freelancer has an overdue invoice, it emails the client every three days until it gets paid, so the freelancer doesn't have to write another follow-up from scratch ever again.
Every freelancer knows the feeling. The invoice is a week late. Then two. You draft a polite reminder, second-guess the tone, and don't send it. A month later the client is avoiding you and the money is harder to get back than it would have been in week one.
You add an invoice — debtor email, amount, due date, optional PDF attachment. That's the whole form. InvoiceUp stores it and then, on a three-day cadence, sends a follow-up email on your behalf until you mark it paid. The first email is polite. The follow-ups escalate in tone but never in aggression. All templated, all proven copy, all sent from your own sender identity.
The dashboard shows pending and paid. One click to mark paid. One click to delete. No dashboards within dashboards, no analytics you didn't ask for, no upsells wedged into the empty state.
InvoiceUp shares its account with every other Dekimu app. One login at `accounts.dekimu.com`, and you're signed into InvoiceUp and everything we ship after it. No separate password, no separate billing, no re-entering your name and tax ID on every tool. That was the whole reason we built the shared auth hub before launching the second app.
The tools a freelancer needs to run a business should feel like one business, not ten vendors with overlapping dashboards.
Stripe payments on the follow-up emails, so the client can pay in two clicks without a phone call. Rate-card templates for freelancers who quote a lot of new work. And a deeper integration with the forthcoming PlanMyBusiness, so the invoices you issue and the revenue you forecast live in the same place.
InvoiceUp is free while we dial in the product. Pricing will land when the core is done and we can price it honestly. If you want to try it today, it's at invoiceup.app — same Dekimu login you already have.