| Will You Add? |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Business > Good Contracts Make Good Clients |
|
Will You Add? - Good Contracts Make Good Clients
It's Just So Impossible To Imagine A Life Without Electricity Or Electronic Goods p>It’s just so impossible to imagine a life without electricity or electronic goods. Electronic goods have become such intrinsic part of our lives that we have started taking them for granted. Would not life be such an improbability without refrigerators, water heaters, iron, coffee maker, dryers, air conditioners and dish washers?!Though these items are easily available on high streets, yet owing to several factors, purchasing them always proves to be a harrowing experience. The electronic goods market in UK has reached such a crescendo that a customer is spoilt for choice and gets all confused before settling down with a product from one of the merchants. Best option available in such a scenario is to go in for various e-shops and cash back portals that helps its customers make as informed a choice as possible.These portals let you compare electronic goods price and finally helps you buy cheap electronic goods of best quality by top merchants. What would be better than getting all top line electronic goods merchants at a single platform offering best deals and goods at discounted prices. What more, cash back portals even provide you huge cash backs for shopping through them.Online sho A few days later I called the client and suggested that I change the sequence of chapters as defined in the contract so the third milestone would be an extensive glossary instead of about digital video. I said it would give me more time to research the remaining chapters, which was quite correct since it would have allowed me more time to interview key engineers at Apple and Radius. Since I had planed on paying for the interviews, I wanted it to be at a point where I knew I was certain I would make enough to cover the expense. The client agreed, largely because I hadn't given any indication I was on to him. When I turned in the third milestone, the client again told me that he had still not yet read anything I had turned in. Again, he repeated his request for "more." Again, I picked up my check and left. I had estimated that if the client were going to try to pull something, he would do it in the last week before the fourth milestone was due. He was right on schedule. In the middle of that week I got a call from him at work. He sound You're Fired! Tips for Avoiding the Termination Blues This January marks the tenth anniversary of the Advertising & Marketing Review Website, and to mark the occasion this column is about how the Website was initially funded. It’s a cautionary tale about the necessity of having a good contract whenever doing contract work.With almost daily news reports of companies laying off workers, or filing for bankruptcy, or going out of business altogether, losing your job suddenly doesn't sound all that unlikely. Here are some strategies either to avoid being laid-off, or to cushion the blow if it comes.1. Keep your resume current. If you haven't looked at your resume in over a year, drag it out and review it. Make sure you've included your latest work accomplishments and that it adequately represents who you are. Whether or not you are looking for a new job, you should update your resume every time you get an award, finish a big project, or get a promotion.2. Stay up to date on the latest news about your company and in your field. Read the business sections in the newspaper. Look at trade journals. Read your company's annual report. Pay particular attention to stories that might indicate the market for widgets (or whatever your company does) is going south.3. Get to know people in different departments in your company. The sales and service staffs always know before anyone else how the company is doing. Learn to read the handwriting on the wall.4. If you think the company might be considering layoffs, get busy finding While working at Apple In 1995, I ran into someone looking for a writer to adapt a lecture series on multimedia production to a book format. Since I had recently worked at Radius as Beta Site Coordinator introducing a variety of breakthrough multimedia products to Hollywood and Madison Avenue, the job sounded perfect. I submitted a detailed proposal asking for $8,000 to provide a 75,000 word book with screen shots but no line art. The client countered with a price of $5000 for 50,000 words and no line art. The contract specified that 25% to 50% of the total words would be supplied by client in the form of a transcript of the lectures. The work would be delivered in four installments, each two weeks apart. According to the contract he had two weeks from delivery to accept or reject each milestone delivery. While the price was adequate, the payment schedule was highly suspicious. Rather than equal payments for the four milestones, the client insisted on a balloon payment “bonus” for making the last milestone on time. This effectively meant that after I had handed over all four installments, the client would have only paid me half of the total. The client justified this by saying the publisher had given him a deadline shortly after the fourth milestone was due and that he would loose royalty points if the manuscript was delivered late. Maybe this was true, but I suspected there was another reason for the payment structure. Generally, when a client holds off a significant percentage of the payment until after most of the contracted work has been turned in it’s because they’re planning to demand more than agreed to for the final payment, and sometimes a lot more. The large unpaid balance gives them a lot of leverage, and they will use it. Their hope is that the contractor will be focused on getting the total amount promised, and completely loose sight of how much work they are being asked to do to collect it. In many cases, that strategy works. A good counter-strategy in those situations is to give the client the benefit of the doubt, but to be ready and willing to quit the minute the demands significantly exceed the contract. Given that the first three milestones paid reasonably well for the work required, I set my goal on completing them successfully. If he wasn't honest, it was in my best interest to put off any confrontations with the client until after I received payment for the third milestone. With luck, the terms for the fourth milestone would not be changed and remain easy and profitable to meet. I noted that the client made it a point to tell me that he was good friends with the manager of the project I was working on. He was either being friendly, or was planning to use that later as pressure. I became a bit concerned when I saw that the transcript provided was a lot rougher than I expected, but since at least 25% of it could be used, the writing effort required still wouldn’t be too bad. The first milestone came and went with only one problem. The client had requested that the first milestone include a lengthy chapter on a multimedia kiosk at a major university. When I turned it in he informed me that he had not been able to secure rights from the university and the entire chapter would have to be discarded, meaning it would not count towards the 50,000 word quota I was obligated to provide. I was annoyed about this but did not want a confrontation at that point. When I turned in the second milestone the client made two comments that that confirmed my suspicions about him. First, he said that he had not had time to read the first milestone I turned in, though he said he was sure that it was all right. Second, he told me that he had been in touch with the publisher and the publisher said they needed "more, MORE." I didn't ask him if that meant more than the 50,000 words I was contracted to supply. I knew the answer. I said I understood, picked up my check and left. A few days later I called the client and suggested that I change the sequence of chapters as defined in the contract so the third milestone would be an extensive glossary instead of about digital video. I said it would give me more time to research the remaining chapters, which was quite correct since it would have allowed me more time to interview key engineers at Apple and Radius. Since I had planed on paying for the interviews, I wanted it to be at a point where I knew I was certain I would make enough to cover the expense. The client agreed, largely because I hadn't given any indication I was on to him. When I turned in the third milestone, the client again told me that he had still not yet read anything I had turned in. Again, he repeated his request for "more." Again, I picked up my check and left. I had estimated that if the client were going to try to pull something, he would do it in the last week before the fourth milestone was due. He was right on schedule. In the middle of that week I got a call from him at work. He sound Consumer Buying Habits in the UK r reject each milestone delivery.Key Note's fourth Market Assessment report on Men & Women's Buying Habits shows fundamental shifts in the traditional balance of economic power between men and women. The impacts of both prolonged prosperity and the rise in the number of women entering the workplace have brought male dominance of big ticket consumer spending to a new tipping point. Similarly, the growth in Internet retailing has brought a reversal in the previous male dominance of this distribution chain. Key Note research indicates that women are now the leading Internet shoppers, in terms of both volume and value. Elsewhere in the economy, new developments i retailing and marketing are challenging those stereotypes that had influenced strategic thinking in retail.The UK economy underwent a short, sharp shock in 2004, after interest rates rose. Consumers were forced to rethink outstanding credit arrangements and to rein in their spending. Consequently, consumer expenditure slowed in the latter half of 2004 and beginning of 2005 and the levels of savings began to rise again. Key Note research indicates that this shift in attitude was particularly significant among men who tend to carry higher levels of debt and to have more concerns about repaym While the price was adequate, the payment schedule was highly suspicious. Rather than equal payments for the four milestones, the client insisted on a balloon payment “bonus” for making the last milestone on time. This effectively meant that after I had handed over all four installments, the client would have only paid me half of the total. The client justified this by saying the publisher had given him a deadline shortly after the fourth milestone was due and that he would loose royalty points if the manuscript was delivered late. Maybe this was true, but I suspected there was another reason for the payment structure. Generally, when a client holds off a significant percentage of the payment until after most of the contracted work has been turned in it’s because they’re planning to demand more than agreed to for the final payment, and sometimes a lot more. The large unpaid balance gives them a lot of leverage, and they will use it. Their hope is that the contractor will be focused on getting the total amount promised, and completely loose sight of how much work they are being asked to do to collect it. In many cases, that strategy works. A good counter-strategy in those situations is to give the client the benefit of the doubt, but to be ready and willing to quit the minute the demands significantly exceed the contract. Given that the first three milestones paid reasonably well for the work required, I set my goal on completing them successfully. If he wasn't honest, it was in my best interest to put off any confrontations with the client until after I received payment for the third milestone. With luck, the terms for the fourth milestone would not be changed and remain easy and profitable to meet. I noted that the client made it a point to tell me that he was good friends with the manager of the project I was working on. He was either being friendly, or was planning to use that later as pressure. I became a bit concerned when I saw that the transcript provided was a lot rougher than I expected, but since at least 25% of it could be used, the writing effort required still wouldn’t be too bad. The first milestone came and went with only one problem. The client had requested that the first milestone include a lengthy chapter on a multimedia kiosk at a major university. When I turned it in he informed me that he had not been able to secure rights from the university and the entire chapter would have to be discarded, meaning it would not count towards the 50,000 word quota I was obligated to provide. I was annoyed about this but did not want a confrontation at that point. When I turned in the second milestone the client made two comments that that confirmed my suspicions about him. First, he said that he had not had time to read the first milestone I turned in, though he said he was sure that it was all right. Second, he told me that he had been in touch with the publisher and the publisher said they needed "more, MORE." I didn't ask him if that meant more than the 50,000 words I was contracted to supply. I knew the answer. I said I understood, picked up my check and left. A few days later I called the client and suggested that I change the sequence of chapters as defined in the contract so the third milestone would be an extensive glossary instead of about digital video. I said it would give me more time to research the remaining chapters, which was quite correct since it would have allowed me more time to interview key engineers at Apple and Radius. Since I had planed on paying for the interviews, I wanted it to be at a point where I knew I was certain I would make enough to cover the expense. The client agreed, largely because I hadn't given any indication I was on to him. When I turned in the third milestone, the client again told me that he had still not yet read anything I had turned in. Again, he repeated his request for "more." Again, I picked up my check and left. I had estimated that if the client were going to try to pull something, he would do it in the last week before the fourth milestone was due. He was right on schedule. In the middle of that week I got a call from him at work. He sound Corporate Snack Gift Baskets ount promised, and completely loose sight of how much work they are being asked to do to collect it. In many cases, that strategy works.Gift baskets are available in a wide variety of products to match the tastes of different personalities. Most gift baskets are intended to be a complete package and hence, a number of recipients like to keep the baskets long after the eatables have been consumed. Corporate gift baskets may be addressed to one person or could be sent to a group or department.Corporate gift snack baskets can include collections of cheese, wine, chocolates, candies, poultry, lamb, pork, veal, smoked meats and appetizers, traditional and exotic seasonal fruits, or seafood. These gifts not only celebrate special occasions but also express a company?s care and concern for all its employees, stockholders and clients.Corporate snack gift baskets are usually options that people all over the world love to receive. They comprise of singular products or assorted combinations. They include sweets, liquor chocolates, snacks and desserts. Other types of corporate snack gift baskets are those that contain special cheeses, soups, caviar and wine. Some companies opt for unique snack gift baskets that comprise of p?t?, caviar, smoked fish and imported country specific delights. These are all gift options that would be remembered by recipien A good counter-strategy in those situations is to give the client the benefit of the doubt, but to be ready and willing to quit the minute the demands significantly exceed the contract. Given that the first three milestones paid reasonably well for the work required, I set my goal on completing them successfully. If he wasn't honest, it was in my best interest to put off any confrontations with the client until after I received payment for the third milestone. With luck, the terms for the fourth milestone would not be changed and remain easy and profitable to meet. I noted that the client made it a point to tell me that he was good friends with the manager of the project I was working on. He was either being friendly, or was planning to use that later as pressure. I became a bit concerned when I saw that the transcript provided was a lot rougher than I expected, but since at least 25% of it could be used, the writing effort required still wouldn’t be too bad. The first milestone came and went with only one problem. The client had requested that the first milestone include a lengthy chapter on a multimedia kiosk at a major university. When I turned it in he informed me that he had not been able to secure rights from the university and the entire chapter would have to be discarded, meaning it would not count towards the 50,000 word quota I was obligated to provide. I was annoyed about this but did not want a confrontation at that point. When I turned in the second milestone the client made two comments that that confirmed my suspicions about him. First, he said that he had not had time to read the first milestone I turned in, though he said he was sure that it was all right. Second, he told me that he had been in touch with the publisher and the publisher said they needed "more, MORE." I didn't ask him if that meant more than the 50,000 words I was contracted to supply. I knew the answer. I said I understood, picked up my check and left. A few days later I called the client and suggested that I change the sequence of chapters as defined in the contract so the third milestone would be an extensive glossary instead of about digital video. I said it would give me more time to research the remaining chapters, which was quite correct since it would have allowed me more time to interview key engineers at Apple and Radius. Since I had planed on paying for the interviews, I wanted it to be at a point where I knew I was certain I would make enough to cover the expense. The client agreed, largely because I hadn't given any indication I was on to him. When I turned in the third milestone, the client again told me that he had still not yet read anything I had turned in. Again, he repeated his request for "more." Again, I picked up my check and left. I had estimated that if the client were going to try to pull something, he would do it in the last week before the fourth milestone was due. He was right on schedule. In the middle of that week I got a call from him at work. He sound Power Transformer Basics , the writing effort required still wouldn’t be too bad.Transformer is an electrical machine so as to transfer power commencing one circuit to a different by transformer attractive combination through no affecting parts. Transformer comprise of two or supplementary attached windings otherwise a single tap windy and, in most cases, Transformer a magnet, the category of the magnet cover all method of strategy intended to create, conduct, straight, exchange otherwise defend the abuser from electrical liberation.Most important produce families contained by electrical and electronic mechanism consist of batteries, connectors, inactive electronic mechanism, electrical allocation and defense gear fuse, supremacy supplies and conditioners, relay and timers, switches, rush forward suppressors, and wires and lead. Batteries are strategy that exchange power into electrical current Batteries is worn in a broad range of engineering application to power electronic strategy.In attendance there are two main sequence types - chemical and physical Battery related trimmings and mechanism such as chargers, racks and cabinet are also enclosed in this segment Connectors consist of all method of plug, socket, cap, strips and conductors considered to connect and demeanor electrical e The first milestone came and went with only one problem. The client had requested that the first milestone include a lengthy chapter on a multimedia kiosk at a major university. When I turned it in he informed me that he had not been able to secure rights from the university and the entire chapter would have to be discarded, meaning it would not count towards the 50,000 word quota I was obligated to provide. I was annoyed about this but did not want a confrontation at that point. When I turned in the second milestone the client made two comments that that confirmed my suspicions about him. First, he said that he had not had time to read the first milestone I turned in, though he said he was sure that it was all right. Second, he told me that he had been in touch with the publisher and the publisher said they needed "more, MORE." I didn't ask him if that meant more than the 50,000 words I was contracted to supply. I knew the answer. I said I understood, picked up my check and left. A few days later I called the client and suggested that I change the sequence of chapters as defined in the contract so the third milestone would be an extensive glossary instead of about digital video. I said it would give me more time to research the remaining chapters, which was quite correct since it would have allowed me more time to interview key engineers at Apple and Radius. Since I had planed on paying for the interviews, I wanted it to be at a point where I knew I was certain I would make enough to cover the expense. The client agreed, largely because I hadn't given any indication I was on to him. When I turned in the third milestone, the client again told me that he had still not yet read anything I had turned in. Again, he repeated his request for "more." Again, I picked up my check and left. I had estimated that if the client were going to try to pull something, he would do it in the last week before the fourth milestone was due. He was right on schedule. In the middle of that week I got a call from him at work. He sound PPC and SEO p>The online community is definitely a large market place that you cannot ignore, especially if you have an internet business. There are thousands if not millions of consumers that you can tap in the internet.At the same time, the internet also poses a quite different challenge. The easy access that internet provides also gives you as much competition as you can imagine. It is too crowded and congested.Having a website is not enough to make your business running and able to compete. You must take other alternatives to give way for the online community to access your website at any rate or chance possible.You have to expose your website. Make it known. It has to be visible. It has to be frequently targeted by consumers and surfers.Invest in marketing your internet site. There are basically two options available to you, the SEO and PPC. These two are probably the most desirable alternatives you can get for your internet business as strategy for search engine marketing.1. SEOSEO stands for Search Engine Optimization. Some researches indicate that 60% - 70% of internet surfers and users actually resort to using the Google search engine to find and locate web sites and pages, for any A few days later I called the client and suggested that I change the sequence of chapters as defined in the contract so the third milestone would be an extensive glossary instead of about digital video. I said it would give me more time to research the remaining chapters, which was quite correct since it would have allowed me more time to interview key engineers at Apple and Radius. Since I had planed on paying for the interviews, I wanted it to be at a point where I knew I was certain I would make enough to cover the expense. The client agreed, largely because I hadn't given any indication I was on to him. When I turned in the third milestone, the client again told me that he had still not yet read anything I had turned in. Again, he repeated his request for "more." Again, I picked up my check and left. I had estimated that if the client were going to try to pull something, he would do it in the last week before the fourth milestone was due. He was right on schedule. In the middle of that week I got a call from him at work. He sounded very angry, arguing that he had finally read the three previous milestones and was rejecting all of them. He demanded to see me immediately. When I met him, he handed me a copy of the chapters I had turned in, loaded with editing marks and comments and he launched into a tirade about the quality of my work. As he went on, I examined the marked up chapters and noticed that nearly all the critical comments on the pages involved the text I used that he had provided. Chapters and sections I had written from scratch had few, if any, critical comments. In effect, he was rejecting the 25% of the text he was contractually obligated to provide. This was a classic maneuver on the part of my client. His emotionalism was calculated to keep my mind on anything but the terms of the contract. Anyone in any kind of business, whether it's advertising, writing or palm reading, either has, or will eventually, face this situation, and probably many times. It's when your client is the most emotional that you have to be the most detached. If you can't be detached and keep your mind on the contract terms, you need to find another line of work. The client expected me to crater under his tirade, I didn’t, and at one point for a second he looked lost and confused. He was obviously used to this technique working. Then he continued, telling me what he expected from me to make it right. What he now wanted was pretty much what I had specified in my $8,000 bid; a much longer book, completely original, and with line art. He was expecting me to provide much more than I agreed to make up for the “bad” job I had done on the first three milestones. He was profoundly optimistic, though he had yet to realize it. He strongly suggested that I take time off from my job at Apple to make time for the revisions and additional material. He may have been setting up this demand when he told me he was friends with the manager of the project I was working on. However, it seemed to me that his manager friend would rather have me working on the project I was supposed to be working on than taking time off to work on an unrelated project for a fried of his. From a business perspective, taking time off from a well paying job to work on something whose rewards were dubious just didn’t make sense. The client demanded that I provide the additional material he requested and threatened to sue me if I didn’t. It was an empty threat, and he knew it. He couldn’t sue me for failing to provide content I had not agreed to provide in the first place. In addition, he was the one breaking the contract, and in at least four ways. By default, he had accepted the first two milestones when he failed to reject them within the two week period the contract specified. His only stated reason for rejecting the third milestone was that the glossary wasn't long enough, even though it more than met the word count required in the contract. He was also failing to provide the minimum 25% of the text for the book, and according to the contract he couldn't require line art either. I quit the book project at that point. Once you know you have a dishonest client it's best the part company as soon as possible. Suing him to force him to live up to the contract wouldn't have been worth the effort. Besides, I had earned a reasonable profit for the work I did, more than enough to buy an Apple PowerPC. In addition, I acquired thousands of dollars worth of software from companies whose products I reviewed in the book. It was all the software I would need to launch a Website. In the end, my client got what he paid for, though it was not all he wanted. He is in a small way commemorated by the A&M Review Website, in that the initials of the magazine spell his first name, Amr. Out of good taste, I have never brought this to his attention. The lesson learned from this project is simple. Good contracts make good clients, even if they don’t want to be. Never work for a client without a detailed contract specifying exactly what your obligations to the client are, and how much you wall be paid for them. It’s the nature of business that the client will try to get all the work he can from you, whether it’s in the contract or not. Only a co
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:The Secret To Bringing More Cash Into Your Business Brighton: A Great Conference Venue The Basics To Setting Up A Merchant Account
|