
Nick The Man
New member
Well?????????????????????
WEEEERRRRRDDDDDDDDDDDDDzed32 said:cash up front!
Nick The Man said:WEEEERRRRRDDDDDDDDDDDDD
Nick The Man said:southside, i see you answered other... is there an explanation
SouthSIDE Glen said:For me, it depends upon the client and on the type of recording setup. Do I know them and trust them? Are they going by the hour or buying a set package?
If it's by the hour, I'd like to set up a minimum estimate package and get a down payment of some type, 20-50%, minimum (unless I know and trust them well, in which case I'll take a handshake.)
Same thing if they are buying a package, the difference being it's not just an estimate, but rather a hard figure based upon a set amount of time not to be exceeded. *NEVER* charge a set bid price without setting a maximum amount of time, otherwise you'll be nickeled and dimed to death on "one more take" and "that's still not quite right", and before you know it a paid 2-hr session takes 8 hours and you wind up paying them for you time.
G.
NYMorningstar said:Use a contract and learn a little civil law. Service industry contracts are pretty hard to break in court and it's pretty easy to file and win a case. You are providing a service and if you have an agreement spelled out and you perform your end of it, you deserve to get paid. Once you get a judgement, collecting on it is another story but again, it is not that difficult. If you need, get an attorney to compose the contracts and/or handle your cases.
unless you are talking about a substantial amount of money - you'll pay way more in lawyer fees, court costs and just trying to get the money from the judgement if you win that what is owed. not that difficult? try impossible.
i'm a paralegal not an attoney but those contracts and legal advice things you see in small business books? hahahaha. they're pretty funny. things really don't work that way in the real world.
now small claims court? totally cool. file something and ask for your court costs. you will probably win. you will probably not collect...there's no teeth in the judgement.
i guess my point is - i'd wouldn't even bother with a contract. it will scare people away and put bad rep out on the street about ya.
Mike
Any amount I charge for my time is substantial, I don't use attorneys and if you think you can win a case without a written contract you are a moron.bigtoe said:unless you are talking about a substantial amount of money - you'll pay way more in lawyer fees, court costs and just trying to get the money from the judgement if you win that what is owed. not that difficult? try impossible.
I'm not sure what real world you live in but remind me not to use you for legal advice.bigtoe said:i'm a paralegal not an attoney but those contracts and legal advice things you see in small business books? hahahaha. they're pretty funny. things really don't work that way in the real world.
Are you sure you are a paralegal? Most commercial claims are civil matters depending on the amount.bigtoe said:now small claims court? totally cool. file something and ask for your court costs. you will probably win. you will probably not collect...there's no teeth in the judgement.
You sound a bit paranoid. People don't shy away from legitimacy. If you provide a valuable service then you can expect value in return and a good rep.bigtoe said:i guess my point is - i'd wouldn't even bother with a contract. it will scare people away and put bad rep out on the street about ya.
Mike