Invoice-builder-module-for-perfex-crm-v1.0.0.zipOne week later, four payments had cleared. Her anxiety had turned into cash flow. Maya stared at the blinking cursor on her screen. The clock on her wall read 11:47 PM. For the past three months, she had been drowning in spreadsheets, sticky notes, and the chaotic symphony of client emails. Tonight, she had snapped. She called Leo from the office. "Version 1.0.1?" she asked. invoice-builder-module-for-perfex-crm-v1.0.0.zip For the next two hours, Maya paced and talked. "I want it to pull the project hours automatically. I want to add a 'sneaky fee' for revisions past round three. I want a big, friendly 'PAY NOW' button that actually works. And I want it to feel like us—clean, bold, no corporate jargon." Last month, a client had paid her $500 instead of $5,000 because she’d misplaced a zero. Another client simply "didn't see" the attachment. He dragged it into her Perfex installation. A green success banner blinked to life. "Version 1.0.0," he said, yawning. "Consider it an alpha. But try it." One week later, four payments had cleared Leo, a developer by trade, didn't say a word. He just pulled up a chair, cracked his knuckles, and opened a new project folder. "Describe your perfect invoice," he said. Perfex CRM was her digital backbone—it handled her projects, her support tickets, her leads. But invoicing? It felt like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. Every Friday, she’d manually export data, open a separate app, type every line item by hand, and pray the math was right. It worked. Perfectly. "Already planning it," he said. "Automatic late-payment reminders." She didn't sleep that night. Instead, she generated invoices for the past three weeks. By 6 AM, she had sent out twelve clean, un-ignorable bills totaling over $18,000. Maya opened a test project for her biggest client. With three clicks, the module generated an invoice. It had the hours, the expenses, the agreed rate—and a beautiful, curved "Pay with Card" button. She added a custom line: "Creative Spark Fee: $250." The clock on her wall read 11:47 PM "I need a miracle," she whispered. Her fiancé, Leo, found her at 10 PM, head in her hands, staring at a screen filled with angry red tabs. "You need a vacation," he said. |