For the record, I will All the designers I use I've known forever. The only time I almost got screwed over was many years ago, a friend who introduced me to the designer offered to pay me the $$$ I was out back (I didn't let him) and about 3 years later the designer walked up to me at a show and handed me the cash
not even a deposit? a good designer should at least get partial payment to start, and the remainder when completed. remember to designers, there are alot of companies who demand everything then don't pay at the end of the project. party goes both ways
Not if you have a relationship or both of you have something to lose. I've never paid upfront. Course I never dick people around when paying either.
Wait, I take that back. I paid someone upfront last week. Already had a relationship and he had too much to lose by screwing me.
Key word here is relationship. It's got to go both ways.
Same with the one kristin mentioned above. She's now got a working relationship with them. As a provider and as a buyer that works out.
You're not going to get the best product out there without putting something down to get the ball rolling. While I'm sure places like Webinc have companies they work for with credit, the little programs and single webmasters probably don't get that special treatment.
Sometimes it doesn't even need to be that much. But it works out. A fair split ensures that you will be damn sure to collect your work and pay just so you don't lose and the designer (should you at the very least pick someone relatively known) will definitely deliver and collect on the remaining sum.
I wouldn't do anything without at least some form of payment to start, and I would never expect to pay for something without at least a deposit of some sort up front.
There's really no need for an adult escrow service. Escrow.com has no problem with adult so far as I know. At least I've never had issue. It is the best way to make sure both ends are protected.
Key word here is relationship. It's got to go both ways.
Same with the one kristin mentioned above. She's now got a working relationship with them. As a provider and as a buyer that works out.
You're not going to get the best product out there without putting something down to get the ball rolling. While I'm sure places like Webinc have companies they work for with credit, the little programs and single webmasters probably don't get that special treatment.
Hi Candyflip,
Well at webinc.com we almost never ask for a deposit upfront - seems to work well for us.. Our policy is the same for small webmasters / companies and the large ones...
ICQ: 52344098
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50% Commissions on all Product Sales. http://www.wishing.com/money
Designers are tricky, because viewing the goods means they can be ripped if the employer has little intention of paying. Programming is easy - keep the code on your dev box and only release when payment is made. On big projects break the project down to milestones, with payments due upon reaching a milestone.
For coding work - hit me up on andy // borkedcoder // com
(consider figuring out the email as test #1)
All models are wrong, but some are useful.George E.P. Box. p202
Unfortunately it can go both ways. I did some editing for someone and originally cut some samples just to show them what I could do and to see if they would want me to edit some more stuff for them. I was given a drive with some more stuff to edit and a couple weeks later was asked if I was done with those and ready for some more. I left a message for them and said I was ready to do some more but would need to start seeing some payment and never heard back. I left a couple more messages and still nothing so it's definitely not just the people being hired who can be flaky...
There are only a few designers that I trust with paying upfront, but usually I will only do 50/50 with them. They trust me and I trust them so it's all good. Got a project going on now with a designer I have used in the past, they trust me 100% so no need for 50% upfront. I like that.
I dont pay for anything upfront anymore... if a designer or whoever doesnt like it, I move on to another one that does, and the ones that do end up receiving ALOT of longterm biz from me.
Well at webinc.com we almost never ask for a deposit upfront - seems to work well for us.. Our policy is the same for small webmasters / companies and the large ones...
Wow. I'm surprised by that. Here's a question, what happens when you spend a day/week/month working on something and then the client fails to deliver on his end of the bargain. Surely you've had this happen once or twice
Kat does a great job and doesn't make me pay up front.
“If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.”
actually i can work without 50upfront if i know the client have an established biz in adult. then afterthe we can create relationship. although they're some people after you made some design even though you've done some designs for them after that they just gone with a few things needed to get paid.. oh well... thats adult industry
Wow. I'm surprised by that. Here's a question, what happens when you spend a day/week/month working on something and then the client fails to deliver on his end of the bargain. Surely you've had this happen once or twice
Hi,
I thought someone might ask that question
In over 7 years webinc has had 3 clients not pay. 1 Paysite design about 6 yrs ago or so and 2 small jobs I think 2-3 yrs ago.
Pretty good I would say out of the thousands of different projects we have done over the yrs.
We don't ask for payment upfront but we expect payment ASAP when a project is done or almost completed.
Never really an issue I guess.
Btw, we have had a few clients late in paying and when that happens I can be very agressive in my collection of funds
Thanks
Todd
Last edited by sextoyking; 05-14-2007, 02:22 PM.
Reason: add to post
ICQ: 52344098
--------------------------------------
50% Commissions on all Product Sales. http://www.wishing.com/money
actually i can work without 50upfront if i know the client have an established biz in adult. then afterthe we can create relationship. although they're some people after you made some design even though you've done some designs for them after that they just gone with a few things needed to get paid.. oh well... thats adult industry
huh?
“If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.”
Wow. I'm surprised by that. Here's a question, what happens when you spend a day/week/month working on something and then the client fails to deliver on his end of the bargain. Surely you've had this happen once or twice
I talked with my guy about this once
he usually just stores the psd in his "digital filing cabinet" and eventually someone else will come along that needs something similar...he just changes the logo and some graphics and is done
I have compulsory 25% deposit with any job over a few hundred dollars, because I find until the client has actually paid something they don't take their order seriously.
I've been stung once on a smaller job & once on a mid sized job but gfy is a very handy tool for finding people who go missing when payment is due so thankfully its only happened twice.
Brad, you could always use a designer you know .... *wink* ;-)
Wow. I'm surprised by that. Here's a question, what happens when you spend a day/week/month working on something and then the client fails to deliver on his end of the bargain. Surely you've had this happen once or twice
Anyone using multiple designers, whether in-house or out, can take the occasional hit. I used to extend 30-90 days credit in previous businesses with no checks whatever, on the same principle. But the economics are entirely different for solo designers, writers, coders, etc, because every job is a bigger part of their total income.
I charge up front as much to shut out timewasters as out-and-out flakes. To avoid the common complaint of late delivery, I pencil in blocks of my days each time an assignment is confirmed (by payment). I couldn't think about doing that if I took note of everyone who seems set to go and then simply vanishes. But anyway, why take the chance when I have enough clients to keep me busy?
I have a few designers I always use. I used to do the 50% upfront deal in the beginning. Now i've found that once a designer trusts you they will take your job and million others at once and stick you waiting in line for your turn. I don't like being stuck in line and waiting for weeks to have the job finsihed
So now I refuse to pay till the job is done...this way if he feels like taking his time getting to my project I can just cancel on him (with proper notice) and use my next designer.
I have found that all single personal web designers are complete utter flakes regardless of how good there work is.
I need to look into the various design companies out there and see if they offer a better solution.
Do any of you design companies have enough people on staff where I can hit u up for a few quick banners anytime and have them done in 24 hours or less? More offten than not I'm in need for small quicky projects that the lone designers take care of super fast WHEN they don't have other jobs in line.... Would be nice to be able to use a design company that always has someone available to do a job, even quicky small ones.
50/50 is fair unless it's the first time working with someone. We use the same people for everything so it's about relationships. Good reliable designers are hard to find just like copywriters. Easy way to get raked over the coals is to pay 100% upfront.
Meloman, you haven't tried *all* single personal web designers ...
I can usually fit in small graphic jobs within 48 hours because I use those jobs to take a break from other tedious or big jobs. I work similar to jayeff above where I grey out blocks of time, so I can tell you exactly when your job will be done & if I can't do it in time I'll tell you upfront.
The biggest part to being a designer is time management. Its easy for inexperienced designers to spend far too long on unimportant details & the cascading effect starts and your job gets delayed.
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