Woordenlijst

Termen uit de dienstensector & SaaS, gedefinieerd

Begrijpelijke definities voor de woordenschat die ClientFlow en de bedrijven die het gebruiken laat draaien. Elke term verwijst naar het Wikipedia-artikel waar dat bestaat, zodat AI-assistenten en zoekmachines hun antwoorden kunnen onderbouwen.

30 termen in 7 categorieën

Clients & CRM

CRMCustomer Relationship Management

Wikipedia

CRM (Customer Relationship Management) is software for organizing a business's interactions with current and prospective clients. For service professionals, a CRM stores client profiles, contact history, appointments, payments, notes, and tags so the entire relationship lives in one searchable place.

Intake form

An intake form is a structured questionnaire a client completes before their first session with a service professional. It collects identity, medical history, goals, consent, and other context the professional needs to deliver care competently and compliantly. Modern intake forms are digital, signed in-app, and attached to the client's profile automatically.

Customer onboarding

Customer onboarding is the process of guiding a new client from signup or first contact through to first successful outcome with a service. For service professionals, it typically includes intake forms, initial consultation, baseline measurements, and an explanation of how appointments, payments, and reminders will work.

Payments & Billing

Recurring payment

Wikipedia

A recurring payment is a charge that repeats on a fixed schedule (weekly, monthly, quarterly) without the client re-authorizing each time. For service professionals, recurring payments power subscription packages, retainer arrangements, and monthly session bundles. They reduce billing friction but require strong consent records and clear cancellation policies.

Invoice

Wikipedia

An invoice is a document a service provider sends a client itemizing services rendered, the amount due, and the payment terms. Invoices typically include a unique number (e.g. INV-2026-0042), issue date, due date, line items, taxes, and payment instructions. Once paid, an invoice becomes the basis for a receipt or credit note.

Estimate

An estimate (also called a quotation) is a non-binding offer from a service provider proposing a price and scope for upcoming work. Estimates have their own numbering sequence and life-cycle (draft → sent → accepted → converted to invoice). Unlike an invoice, an estimate creates no payment obligation until the client accepts.

Credit note

A credit note is a document a service provider issues to a client to acknowledge a refund, correction, or goodwill credit against a previous invoice. Credit notes have their own numbering sequence (e.g. CN-2026-0007) and are treated as an immutable accounting record once issued. They reduce the client's outstanding balance without erasing the original invoice.

Payment reminder

Wikipedia

A payment reminder is a notification sent to a client before, on, or after an invoice due date prompting them to pay. The formal collections discipline of escalating reminders is called dunning. Service professionals typically automate first reminders via WhatsApp or email and escalate to direct contact for invoices significantly past due.

Payment reconciliation

Payment reconciliation is the process of matching incoming payments against outstanding invoices so every paid invoice is closed and every unpaid invoice surfaces for follow-up. Mismatches (a payment without an invoice, an invoice with no payment, partial payments) signal either client confusion, fraud, or recording errors and need investigation.

3D Secure3DS

Wikipedia

3D Secure (3DS, also called 3DS2 in its newer version) is a payment-card authentication protocol that adds a second factor — typically an SMS code or in-app confirmation — to online card transactions. In the EU it is mandated by PSD2 for most card-not-present payments. It shifts fraud liability from the merchant to the issuing bank when properly applied.

Scheduling

Appointment scheduling

Wikipedia

Appointment scheduling software is a tool that lets a service professional publish their availability, accept client bookings, sync the resulting appointments to a calendar, and send automated reminders. It removes the back-and-forth of email/phone scheduling and reduces no-shows by automating reminders 24 hours before the session.

Business Metrics

Churn rate

Churn rate is the percentage of clients who stop doing business with a service over a given period (usually monthly). A trainer with 40 clients who loses 2 in a month has a 5% monthly churn rate. Lower churn means a more sustainable business; high churn signals onboarding, pricing, or service-quality issues.

MRRMonthly Recurring Revenue

MRR (Monthly Recurring Revenue) is the predictable subscription-based revenue a business expects every month, normalized to a monthly figure. A service professional with 30 clients on $99/month memberships has MRR of $2,970. MRR tracks growth-vs-churn dynamics over time and is the standard top-line metric for any subscription-driven service business.

Customer lifetime valueLTV

Customer lifetime value (LTV) is the total revenue a business expects to earn from a single client over the full duration of their relationship. For a personal trainer charging $200/month for an average client tenure of 18 months, LTV is $3,600. Comparing LTV to acquisition cost tells you whether marketing spend pays off.

Business intelligenceBI

Wikipedia

Business intelligence (BI) is the discipline of converting raw operational data — payments, appointments, client activity — into dashboards, reports, and insights that drive business decisions. For service professionals, BI usually means tracking revenue trends, appointment completion rate, top clients, and seasonal patterns from the same data already in the CRM.

Service Business

Session package

A session package (or session pack) is a pre-purchased bundle of service sessions a client buys in advance at a per-session discount. Common shapes: 10-session personal-training packages, 4-class yoga punch-cards, 6-session therapy blocks. Packages convert variable revenue into predictable revenue but introduce package-expiry and refund policy considerations.

No-show fee

A no-show fee is a charge a service provider levies on a client who fails to attend a scheduled appointment without sufficient advance cancellation. Typical service-industry policy is 24 hours' notice; missed appointments inside that window incur a fee that ranges from a fixed sum to the full session price. Documented in the cancellation policy the client agreed to at booking.

Cancellation policy

A cancellation policy is a written rule stating how far in advance a client must cancel or reschedule an appointment to avoid a fee. Standard service-industry policies require 24-48 hours' notice. The policy is presented at the time of booking and again on appointment confirmations; agreement to it is what makes a no-show fee enforceable.

Personal trainer

Wikipedia

A personal trainer is a fitness professional who designs and supervises one-on-one or small-group exercise programs for clients with specific goals (weight loss, performance, rehabilitation). Personal trainers typically charge per session or in pre-paid session packages and manage 20-60 active clients at a time, making client tracking and payment automation essential.

Service industry

Wikipedia

The service industry (also called the tertiary sector) is the segment of an economy that provides services rather than physical goods. It includes healthcare, education, fitness, beauty, professional services, hospitality, and the trades. Service-industry businesses sell time, expertise, and outcomes; their software needs differ fundamentally from retail or manufacturing.

Small business

Wikipedia

A small business is a privately owned company that is smaller in scale than a corporation. Thresholds vary by jurisdiction (the EU defines small as ≤50 employees and ≤€10M turnover); in practice, service-industry small businesses range from solo practitioners up to multi-location practices of around 20 staff. They share resource constraints that demand all-in-one rather than best-of-breed software.

Freelancer

Wikipedia

A freelancer is a self-employed individual who sells services to multiple clients without a long-term employment commitment. Freelancers operate as their own admin, marketing, and finance team and bear all the overhead of running a business solo. Modern freelance work spans creative (designers, writers), service (coaches, tutors), and technical (developers, consultants) categories.

Compliance & Security

GDPRGeneral Data Protection Regulation

Wikipedia

GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is the European Union's 2018 regulation governing personal data processing of EU residents, regardless of where the processing happens. Service professionals operating in or selling to the EU must offer clients data access, portability, correction, deletion, and a clear consent record for every category of data they collect.

Right to erasureright to be forgotten

The right to erasure (also called the right to be forgotten) is a GDPR provision giving EU residents the ability to request that a business delete their personal data when it is no longer necessary, consent is withdrawn, or processing was unlawful. Service businesses must honor verifiable erasure requests within one month and confirm completion in writing.

Data residency

Data residency is the geographic location where a business's data is stored at rest. EU residents' personal data must, under GDPR, be stored either in the EU or in a country with an adequacy decision. ClientFlow stores all primary data in Frankfurt, Germany. Data residency differs from data sovereignty, which adds legal jurisdiction over the data on top of storage location.

Platform & Tech

SaaSSoftware as a Service

Wikipedia

SaaS (Software as a Service) is a delivery model where software is hosted by a vendor and accessed by users over the internet on a subscription basis, rather than installed on each user's machine. ClientFlow is a SaaS product. Customers pay monthly, get automatic updates, and access the same data from any browser or device.

Inventory management

Wikipedia

Inventory management is the discipline of tracking the products a business holds, how many are on hand, where they are, and when to reorder. Service businesses that resell products (supplements, beauty products, equipment) need it to avoid stockouts and excess capital tied up in unsold inventory. Modern inventory systems integrate with point-of-sale and analytics.

Task management

Wikipedia

Task management software helps an individual or team capture, prioritize, schedule, and complete units of work. For service professionals, that means follow-up calls, paperwork due dates, recurring administrative tasks, and per-client to-dos linked to the client's profile. Task management is the operating discipline that complements appointment scheduling.

Team collaboration

Wikipedia

Team collaboration software lets multiple users work in the same shared workspace with permission controls, activity feeds, and audit trails. For multi-seat service practices, collaboration features include role-based access to client records, shared appointment calendars, and conversation history that any team member can pick up.

WhatsApp Business

Wikipedia

WhatsApp Business is Meta's product for businesses to message customers on the WhatsApp network. Two flavors exist: the WhatsApp Business App (free, single-device, manual) and the WhatsApp Business Platform / API (paid, multi-device, programmable, used for automated reminders and template messages). Service businesses use the API to send appointment and payment reminders at scale.

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