Wheelie
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 34
I was called by a customer (Bill) last week (who I did one job for at his home in 2007) to come out to a business (where he is a consultant) to "talk to the business owner (Oliver) about upgrading their network" and Bill asked me if I could come that day. I said that I could rearrange my schedule and be there within 2 hours. When I arrived about 2 hours later Bill was gone but Oliver was there and we met for about an hour. We discussed replacing his 2 old USB printers attached to a Windows XP PC (that is dedicated to sharing the printers on the network). We also discussed moving from AT&T 6 Mbps DSL to 50 Mbps Comcast business Internet service (he currently has 10 employees connected to the Internet though his LAN). The 10 employee PC's are currently running XP and he said he wants to migrate to Windows 7. We discussed the ins and outs of all this for about an hour and then we concluded the meeting and I presented him an invoice for one hour of my time at my normal rate to which he sort of chuckled and said "you are billing me for your time?" and I smiled and said "yes I always charge for my time." He wrote me a check and I left. I followed up with Bill the next day to clarify what we had discussed and he thanked me for the visit (I did not mention charging Oliver for one hour).
This morning Bill called me and left me a voice-mail and said he was shocked that I charged Oliver and that he had to reimburse Oliver himself for my fee and that he was "disappointed" that I did this to him.
I have never had this happen before. In other words I always bill for my time unless I have screwed something up.
So did I make a mistake? (In hind sight now I wish I did not charge for this).
What do you guys/gals so in these situations? Freebee or charge?
I am thinking about driving back over with hat in hand and asking forgiveness.
.
This morning Bill called me and left me a voice-mail and said he was shocked that I charged Oliver and that he had to reimburse Oliver himself for my fee and that he was "disappointed" that I did this to him.
I have never had this happen before. In other words I always bill for my time unless I have screwed something up.
So did I make a mistake? (In hind sight now I wish I did not charge for this).
What do you guys/gals so in these situations? Freebee or charge?

I am thinking about driving back over with hat in hand and asking forgiveness.
.