On Blinksale

Published 19 years, 4 months past

Partially because it’s been touted as a great XHTML+CSS-based application, and partially because I could use better invoice management, I signed up for a free Blinksale account.  Having spent some time fiddling around with it, I’ll be the first to say that I’m pretty impressed by what’s under the hood.  The markup is just about as clean as a Web application gets, and it generally uses the right elements in the right places.  It might be a little div-heavy, but that’s not an easy thing to avoid.  The gang at Firewheel has done solid work there.

On the other hand, the visual design of Blinksale totally hurts my eyes.  Those are some amazing shades of green, boys.  I really wish they didn’t clash in quite that way.  Also, the entire application feels rather like a copy of Basecamp, from the way it’s organized to the ability to get activity feeds to the “Remember me for 2 weeks” login option.  Those are, of course, all nice options to have in this sort of application, but they still feel like copies.

The help system, on the other hand, turned out to be an enormously deep resource once I drilled in a bit.  Just about anything you could possibly want to know about Blinksale is in there somewhere, I’d wager.  Firewheel has definitely raised the bar there, and gets an enthusiastic round of applause for it.

Beyond that, Blinksale seems like it would be great for hourly consulting, or for invoicing items that are shipped to the customer.  For my purposes, though, it isn’t really an invoicing system.  Most of my work involves traveling to clients to conduct in-person training, so in addition to the consulting fee, there are expenses to bill and receipts to submit.  In some cases, there are clients who would likely refuse to accept a web-based invoice.

So I could use it as a way to track which invoices have gone out and which have been paid, but I could do that with an Excel spreadsheet or a Filemaker Pro database, or heck, I could even whip up my own little PHP/mySQL solution.  Adding in all the extra stuff, like e-mailed invoices and reminders and thank-yous, would be time-consuming, and it would be a truly major effort to add my own PayPal integration, as Blinksale has done.  It probably wouldn’t be anywhere near as polished (although it also wouldn’t have those retina-searing color combinations).  For basic invoice tracking, though, I’d be able to do everything Blinksale offers me, and not have limitations like only being able to store a total of three clients, or being limited to three invoices per month.

Now, remember, I’m talking about what it will do for me.  I’d like to stress that my situation is somewhat unique: not many freelance consultants earn a living in training.  For a freelance designer or even a small design shop, I can totally see Blinksale as being a great application to use.  I doubt I’ll see a need to upgrade to a paid account—but your mileage, as ever, may vary.


Comments (7)

  1. Pingback ::

    SF/F Writings » Blog Archive » Blinksale, a Snarf

    […] 217;t going to mention Blinksale, but then Eric Meyer made me snarf my coffee this morning with this entry: On the other hand, the visual design of Blinksale totally hurts my ey […]

  2. Agreed about the limitations. I looked around for a bit, but am more interested in using something which can help me with book keeping as well. I currently use QuickBooks, which is OK. I use it for estimating (something Blinksale should really include), invoicing, time tracking and preparing my financials for The Man. When and if a better solution comes along for all of this stuff, I will be the first to jump ship, but until then, I am sticking with QuickBooks.

  3. dude, thank you for being the only one to mention how ugly the site is. i was very excited to see the app, as i share their enthusiasm for ruby on rails and xhtml/css. but oh. my. what an ugly site. it looks like a key lime pie and Nsync got together in miami and had some sick sick children. thanks for being brave enough to post something about it.

  4. Have you seen Kindler Chase’s SuperInvoice?
    http://www.ncubed.com/Products/SuperInvoice/

    It’s a great little webapp for designers, etc, and the under-the-hood parts are well-written.

  5. Trackback ::

    TechCrunch

    Profile – Blinksale

    Company: Blinksale
    Launched: July 26, 2005
    Location: Texas
    Overview:
    Want an easier way to manage invoices? Blinksale is for you. And even if it isn’t, take a minute and check out their site. It is visually and functionally stunning. It oozes …

  6. Eric, you may want to look at Vebio (www.vebio.com). I’m the founder so naturally biased, but I believe our invoicing service is better as we use PDFs for the final invoice and also offer recurring invoices.

  7. Pingback ::

    TechCrunch » Profile - Blinksale

    […] wheel Design blog is here. See also SideJobTrack, which is a competitor. Additional Links: Meyerweb, Anil Dash, WorkHappy #1, […]

Add Your Thoughts

Meyerweb dot com reserves the right to edit or remove any comment, especially when abusive or irrelevant to the topic at hand.

HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strong> <pre class=""> <kbd>


if you’re satisfied with it.

Comment Preview