You send in a polished invoice or deliverable…and radiant silence. No reply, no payment, no acknowledgement. You check again—still nothing. The client—your prospect, your lifeline, your business—has ghosted you. Cue the mom-VA panic attack.
It happens. Even top-tier freelancers get ghosted. But it stings less when you’re prepared. Let’s unpack why it happens, what to do next, and how to protect yourself—so you emerge calmer, wiser, and more professional than ever.
1. Why Clients Ghost
Ghosting isn’t always personal. Common reasons include:
- Budget shifts – client funds got reallocated or suddenly paused
- Priorities changed – focus moved elsewhere.
- Overwhelm – your email got buried under 100 others .
- Politeness avoidance – too awkward to say “no thanks” .
- Supplier comparison – they may be vetting others
Real freelancer voice on Reddit:
“Sometimes that warm fuzzy feeling you get… may be enacted if I’m feeling particularly vindictive.” reddit.com
Ouch, but real.
2. First Move: Pause, Don’t Panic
Don’t unleash your inner keyboard warrior. Here’s what not to do:
- Don’t assume the worst immediately.
- Don’t send rant-filled reminders or threats.
- Avoid accusing the client—it can destroy future chances
Instead, pause, breathe, and craft a reply that’s polite and firm.
3. Send a Gentle, Empathetic Follow-Up
Lead with empathy, then gently nudge for clarity. Example email:
Hi [Name],
I hope you’re doing well! I haven’t heard back about [project/invoice], so I just wanted to check in. Could you let me know if we’re still moving forward, completed payment, or need to make changes to the plan?
Thanks, and please tell me if there’s a better way to connect.
Best,
[Your Name]
This keeps doors open while conveying accountability. It’s the “empathetic email” version of the famed “magic email”
4. Try Another Channel—but Be Professional
If that email gets lost, try a different route:
- Call their office.
- Message on LinkedIn or WhatsApp.
- Send a note to another contact at the client’s company
Still no reply after a week? It’s probably ghosting at this point. Time to decide how far you go.
5. Escalate at Your Comfort Level
Situation | 1st Follow-Up | 2nd Reminder | Final Notice |
---|---|---|---|
No reply to deliverable | Send kind check-in | Another follow-up in 3 days | “If I don’t hear by X, I’ll consider the project closed.” |
Invoice unpaid | Resend invoice & note | Add a reminder email | “Final invoice attached, project complete.” |
Ongoing deliverables halted | Pause work & notify | Set reply deadline | Archive folder & move forward |
➡️ If it’s a paid client, escalate politely:
“If I don’t hear from you by [date], I’ll assume this project is paused and archive files. Happy to pick back up once you’re ready.”
6. Ghost “Ghostbusting” with Grace
If they’ve ghosted post-payment or deliverables, ghostbusting may work:
“Since I haven’t heard back, I assume priorities shifted. Let me know if I should archive documents or resume next month.”
Called the “magic email,” it gets a ~50% response rate Or escalate:
“Hi [Name], can I give this one last nudge before I file it away? Let me know by [date].”
7. Know When to Pull the Plug & Move On
After 2–3 no-responses across channels, it’s time to cut losses:
- Archive project files securely.
- Set a reminder to revisit if they reappear.
- Shift focus on active clients or marketing.
Your business deserves clients who see and value you.
8. Reconnecting? Reset the Relationship Carefully
If the client returns later, tread thoughtfully:
- Collect outstanding payment before more work begins
- Rewrite scope, timeline, and fees—optional rate increase okay.
- Charge for re-familiarization if it’s been a while
- Treat it like a fresh project. Past ghosting? Set stricter boundaries.
This resets expectation and protects both sides.
9. Legal or Collections? Know When to Level Up
If major sums are involved:
- Send a formal reminder or lawyer letter
- Small claims court is an option—but weigh cost/time
- Consider collection agencies for practicality
Most cases resolve after a formal letter—but only go there if it’s worth it to you.
10. Lessons Learned & Next-Level Prevention
Risk | Prevention Tip |
---|---|
Ghosting before scope | Always have a clear contract & upfront deposit |
Unclear expectations | Have kick-off call & shared timeline upfront |
Client distraction | Set regular check-ins & firm communication plan |
Always ghosting? | Reconsider working with similar client types |
Build your onboarding around clarity, communication, and paid commitment. That last one alone can reduce ghosting dramatically
11. Real Freelancer Voices: Shared Frustration & Triumph
From Matt Olpinski:
“When someone genuinely trusts you… They won’t ghost you. Keep fast follow-up and clear expectations in place.”
From Reddit:
“Sometimes that warm fuzzy feeling… may be enacted if I’m feeling particularly vindictive.”
From Fiverr’s blog:
“More than 70% of clients have been stiffed… Make terms crystal clear, play nice, send reminders, escalate professionally.”
12. Self-Care Break: Take Care of You Too
Ghosting feels personal—here’s how to stay centered:
- Acknowledge disappointment—it’s real, but not forever.
- Swap stories with freelancer friends—you’re not alone.
- Take a break—work on personal projects, walk the kids, or enjoy a quiet moment.
You are worth respect—ghosting tells you them, not you.
13. FAQs You’ll Think, “Yes, That Too!”
Q: Should I send a passive-aggressive email?
A: Nope. Stay professional. You never know if a curveball caused the silence.
Q: How many follow-ups is too much?
A: Three (email → call/message → final notice). Then pause.
Q: Should I sue for $200?
A: No. Use collections or legally only if amount justifies it.
Q: Can ghosted clients ever come back?
A: Yes—just reset terms, contract, payments. And charge more if trust was broken.
14. Your Simplified Ghosting Response Plan
- Day 0: Send deliverable/invoice + next steps.
- Day 3: Gentle check-in email.
- Day 7: Phone call or alternate channel.
- Day 10: Final email with a deadline.
- Day 14: Archive and redirect energy.
Rebuild clear boundaries—this is your business foundation.
15. Final Mum-VA Pep Talk
Yes, ghosting sucks. It’s rude, frustrating, and can sting your self-worth. But every step you take now—professional reminders, clarity, boundaries—builds you into a stronger business owner.
You deserve respect. You earn quality. And you have the right to be paid and seen. Ghosting clients reflect them, not your value or talent. You’ve got this, boss mum. Now go reclaim your time, energy, and peace of mind.
This post was written by a boundary-setting, contract-savvy mum-freelancer who’s faced ghosts, walked away stronger, and helped others do the same.
Want my email templates, follow-up schedule, or contract + deposit checklist? Just ask—I’ve got your back.
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