Global Invoicing Nightmares: Hard-Won Product Lessons on EU Tax, Compliance, and Customer Value

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I hit play on Global Invoicing – All Things Product Podcast with Teresa Torres & Petra Wille and felt an immediate jolt of recognition. We’ve all launched a feature that looked solid—until a small, overlooked detail broke everything. Their stories about global invoicing and taxes echoed challenges I’ve faced leading product for international customers: if you don’t design for the last mile of compliance, you can accidentally block the very "moment of value creation" your product promises.

Listen to this episode on: Spotify | Apple Podcasts

The conversation starts as a candid rant about EU tax compliance and quickly becomes a precise product management lesson: when we fail to map the entire path to customer value—down to the tiniest regulatory requirement—we can ship something “done” that still doesn’t work in the real world. That gap between intention and outcome is where good product teams live or die.

In my experience, the nightmare of global invoicing for small online businesses is very real. Even big platforms (like Squarespace and Teachable) miss the mark on EU tax compliance, and when they do, customers feel it immediately. It’s the kind of edge case that doesn’t show up in a demo but absolutely shows up in revenue. Or as Teresa put it, “It’s not a little detail when your client won’t pay the invoice.” — Teresa Torres

I appreciated how the episode digs into the difference between passing a regulatory checklist and actually meeting customer needs. Put plainly: the product isn’t “done” when the ticket moves to Done; it’s done when the customer completes the job—receives an acceptable invoice, pays successfully, and can reconcile it without friction. That’s why I lean hard on story mapping for regulatory work; it exposes the invisible steps where value creation can silently fail.

Here’s how the episode resonates with my own playbook: the nightmare of global invoicing for small online businesses is a systems problem; why even big platforms (like Squarespace and Teachable) miss the mark on EU tax compliance is a prioritization and discovery problem; how Petra and Teresa navigated invoicing across borders with Ableify and LearnWorlds highlights pragmatic tool choices and trade-offs; the key difference between meeting regulations and meeting customer needs is an outcomes-over-output mindset; what product teams can learn from regulatory edge cases is how to find the seams where markets, laws, and workflows collide; how missing a single detail can block the "moment of value creation" is a reminder that value is defined by customers; and why story mapping is critical for finding gaps between "we shipped it" and "customers got value" is the method that connects all of the above.

Practically, that means I treat regulatory features like any other high-stakes product surface: do real product discovery with affected users; co-design the happy path and the ugly edge cases; write acceptance criteria that include jurisdictional and document-level specifics (e.g., VAT numbers, invoice formats, timing rules); align with finance and legal early; and instrument the journey from invoice issued to invoice paid so we can see where real customers get stuck. This is outcomes vs output OKRs in action, and it’s one of the fastest ways to earn trust with stakeholders.

Key takeaways worth bookmarking: Customers define value, not your compliance checklist. Regulatory work still requires discovery—you can’t skip understanding user needs. The path to value doesn’t end when your feature works; it ends when your customer succeeds. “Sweating the details” isn’t micromanagement—it’s good product management.

Memorable quotes to bring back to your team: “If you don’t sweat the details, people choose other platforms.” — Petra Wille. “It’s not a little detail when your client won’t pay the invoice.” — Teresa Torres.

Follow Teresa Torres: https://ProductTalk.org | Follow Petra Wille: https://Petra-Wille.com

Mentioned in the episode: Squarespace | Stripe | Product at Heart | Teachable | LearnWorlds | Ablefy | Become a Better Product Leader: A 52-Week Transformation Journey | Product Talk Academy

Have thoughts on this episode? Leave a comment below.

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Why should EU tax compliance be treated as a product problem rather than just a legal one?

Regulatory requirements can block the moment of value creation if not designed for the last mile. Treating compliance as a product surface enables discovery, instrumentation, and outcomes-driven metrics to improve customer outcomes.

What is the difference between passing a regulatory checklist and meeting customer needs?

Passing a regulatory checklist doesn’t guarantee value. The product is done when the customer completes the job—receives an acceptable invoice, pays, and can reconcile it without friction.

How does story mapping help regulatory work?

Story mapping reveals invisible steps where value can fail and bridges the gap between ‘we shipped it’ and ‘customers got value’ by mapping the path to customer outcomes.

Which platforms are mentioned as missing EU tax compliance?

Squarespace and Teachable are named examples where EU tax compliance falls short, and the gaps can impact how customers pay and use the product.

What practical steps are recommended for tackling regulatory features?

Treat regulatory features as high-stakes product surfaces and conduct real discovery with affected users. Co-design the happy path and edge cases, specify jurisdictional criteria, and align early with finance and legal to instrument the journey from invoice issued to paid.

What quotes about details and payment are highlighted?

The post highlights quotes such as ‘It’s not a little detail when your client won’t pay the invoice’ and ‘If you don’t sweat the details, people choose other platforms.’ These emphasize that small details can determine whether customers pay and stay with a platform.

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