Tony_Scarpelli
Rest In Peace Tony
- Reaction score
- 26
- Location
- Wichita, Kansas U.S.A.
I have the opposite opinion. I feel that having a client, especially a brand new one you met a few moments ago sign anything resembling a legal contract will have the effect of scaring of some. People seldom read them and they will wonder what is in them. They instinctively know that they are to protect you not them. Their guard will go up as they feel they are about to be hoodwinked or hog tied. They won't say "I dont trust you but I am not going with you." they will say things like "let me think about it." and you never hear from them again. This is an invisible cost to you as you will never know what happened.
Perhaps not so in some of the more litigious states like California where nobody does anything without talking to their lawyer but it definitely does hurt you in trusting environments such as in the Midwest.
It is a bad business decision to start managing your business based on the minority bad client. Some of you would submit every new client to what they might feel is a legal shakedown because a very few of them sough to beat you in some way. I say that is a cost of doing business, just move on. Here is my story.
I was operating about 3 years when I got into a disagreement with a client or few about the exact way of completing a job and I ended up doing more work for free (in my mind) to get the job completed and to get paid. This disturbed me so i went out and got a contract/invoice that clearly spelled out my scope of job, when I get paid, who pays court costs when a disagreement and balanced some responsibility on the client to check and approve some of those check points in large projects/items during the course of the job rather than a pass fail at the end.
I had these beautiful forms created. Contract-invoices layed out and printed professionally by a print shop. They were very attractive, expensive and even had a map/ledger on part of the front with room for me to write directions from the closes major intersection to their location. I was very proud of myself for having accomplished this. They were 3 part NCR paper so I could give a copy with the bid, another copy for my work order and third copy for the final invoice for payment when done. They had serialized invoice numbers. I think I had about 5000 made and it cost me a bundle compared to my earnings at the time (well over a weeks earnings).
Front was the invoice, back were the terms. I made sure it was all in non legalese so not to scare folks. It was plain language. It had 13 one or two sentence statements/elements or paragraphs and fit easily on one page, the back of the invoice. The most harsh thing it said is if we went to court the loser paid both sides court costs.
My new client acceptance rate on jobs and projects immediately fell like a rock. I am the type that writes down all my proposals/bids and keeps track of my closing ratio (sales term for number of jobs I get to the number of jobs I bid) and since this ratio is usually consistent over time, I used it as an indicator of whether something is wrong with my presentation or price or changes in the market and what have you. My acceptance rate dropped like a rock which immediately pointed to the new invoices. Previous to that i had used a "invoice pad" purchased at office max with my name/address and logo printed on the top with a ink pad I would put my logo stamp on them after purchasing the pad. No legal mumbo jumbo, no declarations....
I tried using them for a month or so to see if it was me, some how focusing the attention to them and causing my own problems. Never recovered my sales until I stopped using those invoices. They were nothing spooky at all. Why did they effect my sales. I had no idea that they might so it wasn't a case of self fulfilling prophecy.
I am sorry and I do not mean to be disagreeable to those who recommend legal paperwork but I feel strongly that people should be aware of the alternative actions that might happen if they bone up on "legal paperwork." In our attempts to be ultra sophisticated we might loose business.
OK maybe some of you who do long term projects, complicated multi week networking engagements, large scale web site development and things that cannot be easily understood or explained in a sentence or two might have a case for legal contracts/invoices or statements of scope of project, but many of the break fix do not-IMO.
I've also noticed since that time 15 years ago that whenever a new vendor gives me a terms packed invoice or proposal, I tend to back away and favor the less formal companies bids.
From the aspect of salesmanship it is explained by "never bring up a negative." What can be more negative than telling a client in writing all the things that could go wrong, or worse indicated "Something? might go wrong."
Perhaps not so in some of the more litigious states like California where nobody does anything without talking to their lawyer but it definitely does hurt you in trusting environments such as in the Midwest.
It is a bad business decision to start managing your business based on the minority bad client. Some of you would submit every new client to what they might feel is a legal shakedown because a very few of them sough to beat you in some way. I say that is a cost of doing business, just move on. Here is my story.
I was operating about 3 years when I got into a disagreement with a client or few about the exact way of completing a job and I ended up doing more work for free (in my mind) to get the job completed and to get paid. This disturbed me so i went out and got a contract/invoice that clearly spelled out my scope of job, when I get paid, who pays court costs when a disagreement and balanced some responsibility on the client to check and approve some of those check points in large projects/items during the course of the job rather than a pass fail at the end.
I had these beautiful forms created. Contract-invoices layed out and printed professionally by a print shop. They were very attractive, expensive and even had a map/ledger on part of the front with room for me to write directions from the closes major intersection to their location. I was very proud of myself for having accomplished this. They were 3 part NCR paper so I could give a copy with the bid, another copy for my work order and third copy for the final invoice for payment when done. They had serialized invoice numbers. I think I had about 5000 made and it cost me a bundle compared to my earnings at the time (well over a weeks earnings).
Front was the invoice, back were the terms. I made sure it was all in non legalese so not to scare folks. It was plain language. It had 13 one or two sentence statements/elements or paragraphs and fit easily on one page, the back of the invoice. The most harsh thing it said is if we went to court the loser paid both sides court costs.
My new client acceptance rate on jobs and projects immediately fell like a rock. I am the type that writes down all my proposals/bids and keeps track of my closing ratio (sales term for number of jobs I get to the number of jobs I bid) and since this ratio is usually consistent over time, I used it as an indicator of whether something is wrong with my presentation or price or changes in the market and what have you. My acceptance rate dropped like a rock which immediately pointed to the new invoices. Previous to that i had used a "invoice pad" purchased at office max with my name/address and logo printed on the top with a ink pad I would put my logo stamp on them after purchasing the pad. No legal mumbo jumbo, no declarations....
I tried using them for a month or so to see if it was me, some how focusing the attention to them and causing my own problems. Never recovered my sales until I stopped using those invoices. They were nothing spooky at all. Why did they effect my sales. I had no idea that they might so it wasn't a case of self fulfilling prophecy.
I am sorry and I do not mean to be disagreeable to those who recommend legal paperwork but I feel strongly that people should be aware of the alternative actions that might happen if they bone up on "legal paperwork." In our attempts to be ultra sophisticated we might loose business.
OK maybe some of you who do long term projects, complicated multi week networking engagements, large scale web site development and things that cannot be easily understood or explained in a sentence or two might have a case for legal contracts/invoices or statements of scope of project, but many of the break fix do not-IMO.
I've also noticed since that time 15 years ago that whenever a new vendor gives me a terms packed invoice or proposal, I tend to back away and favor the less formal companies bids.
From the aspect of salesmanship it is explained by "never bring up a negative." What can be more negative than telling a client in writing all the things that could go wrong, or worse indicated "Something? might go wrong."
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