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maclover001
May 13, 2009, 08:42 PM
I'll start from the beginning. I posted an ad on Craigslist saying "I'll build you a website for $100". I'm young and want to build a portfolio so I can charge more in the future.

This guy emails me and asks if I can set up a site where people in Vancouver (our city) can write about themselves and people can respond anonymously, get to know each other, and eventually meet. I replied and said I could, thinking that an installation of phpBB with a bit of code-tweaking could get the job done. He gives me his ideas, color scheme, logo, etc. I install phpBB on to his hosting account, did some code-modding to add things such as gender/age under the username, and photo album pages (took about two days). He says he likes it. Then he says he wants built-in blog support. Okay, get WordPress, do some more code-monkeying to integrate them. Done. Now he wants "registration boxes on the front page like Facebook", a dice-roller to see a random post, and somehow, somewhere in the mix, "Vancouver" became "Worldwide". Yup, gotta change all the Vancouver neighborhood forum categories to over 25,000 (?) counties, cities, and neighborhoods. :rolleyes:

Not finished just yet, he wants Facebook and Twitter integration :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

My point is, this is definitely not the $100 project it once was, how do I tell this guy to owe up?
I can't just dump him, I've put weeks into this now-wasted project and want at least something for my time. (He has payed nothing yet)

Suggestions?



dukebound85
May 13, 2009, 08:44 PM
well you did advertise it at 100

has he paid? if so, just stop working on it if he doesnt want to pay

maclover001
May 13, 2009, 08:50 PM
well you did advertise it at 100

True, but his initial description was worth $100, the end result is probably more like $1200.

has he paid? if so, just stop working on it if he doesnt want to pay

Maybe this is one of those facts of life I need to face, but if I just stop working on it, thats like hours a day for a month wasted.

SelfMadeCelo
May 13, 2009, 09:12 PM
Just my two cents:

This is a sucky situation to be in. For future jobs I would definitely create some guidelines as to what the $100 website includes. Maybe a simple template with a couple pages and a few updates down the line. That way the person on the other end doesn't expect you to create the next big thing. But anyways...

I would sit him down and let him know that the amount of work he's asking for at that price isn't going to happen. Try to find a quote for a site like that and show him what professionals (Not that your work isn't professional I just mean people who have been in the business for a long time) are charging. Let him know the amount of time you've spent working on it. If you spent 40 hours over the past couple weeks and only get paid $100, you just made $2.50/hr. I don't think anybody, even a novice, is worth $2.50/hr and I can bet the end result will be a lot more than $1,200.

Personally, I would leave the site as it is now and just take the loss. Sure you spent a lot of time on it for little to no money but at least you have an addition to your portfolio and you learned to always let people know what they get for the price. Let him know you can't do anymore unless he pays more, if he says no, so be it. Leave it as is and don't offer support. Down the line I can see him asking to fix things here and there and include it with the initial $100.

Anyways, good luck. Let us know what happens. Hopefully everything works out and you both end up happy in the end...

Ttownbeast
May 13, 2009, 09:22 PM
Good thing he didn't ask for more from the start and you're lucky you got the c note. As an artist I always underbid on commissions I always offered my design services for a reasonable fee which undercut the competition , but made sure to get half the money upfront so there was no waste of my time and I at least recover cost for time and materials used should the client suffer from buyers remorse. It also works out good for you if you have a policy which details the price structure upfront should there be extras added--always make sure the clients are aware of these from the start. Even starting out never seem desperate or cheap bastards will always try to take advantage of you, that's why 4 years later I still run a business(not a profitable one), but don't make more than a couple hundred a year doing it and hold a regular 9 to 5 to cover the bills, I think eventually the quality will win out though. Running a business is very hard work and sometimes in order to get through life those dreams have to be left on the back burner to simmer while you get your crap together.

Sun Baked
May 13, 2009, 09:41 PM
Maybe this is one of those facts of life I need to face, but if I just stop working on it, thats like hours a day for a month wasted.

Not really, you got some experience, and something for your portfolio.

If the site isn't finished and he hasn't paid, tell him he cannot use the code.

Just because you haven't finished it or been paid, doesn't mean you cannot show it to others.

If he wants the site finished, tell him the $100 introductory offer is over. You only expected at most 20 hours of time, and you have spent way more than that for the changes.

Offer to sell him the current site for $250-500 if he wants to take it to someone else to finish. Especially if you think he isn't going to pay anything else.

Or ask for $500 to finish the original 2-day site, and $500 for every 10 hours in changes or additions after that.

Keebler
May 13, 2009, 09:50 PM
you need to communicate to him that you advertised for $100, but his requirements are way beyond that.

I'm a firm believer that no experience in life is wasted.

You've learned to better outline details prior to a job starting and you also got more experience building a site and working with a client.

Ask him to pay the $100 and explain anything more will cost additional.

Never, ever undersell yourself. Value your time.

gotzero
May 13, 2009, 10:28 PM
The time was not wasted. You learned how to integrate some code together, and you learned that you need to get paid upfront and also have guidelines/contracts.

Tell him he owes $100 now plus a negotiated fee for each additional request. If he knows nothing about computers, he probably does not know how much work it is.

If he does not pay, dump him and take the lessons learned. ;)

maclover001
May 13, 2009, 10:36 PM
Thanks for the responses guys (girls?).

I'll try and think of a nice but firm email to send him based on your opinions.

notjustjay
May 13, 2009, 11:12 PM
This is called "scope creep", and happens all too often. This is why in my line of work (software development for government clients) there's an awful lot of paperwork that happens long before a single line of code gets written, as people write down and review hundreds of pages of requirements documents. As a programmer I find this tedious, but it gives me the power to tell a customer or tester "no, I'm not going to do that, it's not in the requirements". If it's something the customer decides he really does want, then contracts get renegotiated, requirements documents get amended, and the cycle begins anew.

I read maclover001's first post and alarm bells ring in my head when I see terms like "now he wants" and "next he's asking for". The way to handle this in the future is to define up-front what the client wants, estimate how many hours it will take you to do the job, make sure it's reasonable for the price being quoted, then deliver the work. You might agree that the price quoted includes, say, up to 2 hours of extra work doing tweaks and adjustments.

If the client then says "great, but now I want", then you can stop him and say "I can do that, but that's beyond the scope of the original requirements, so let's agree on a price to do this additional work."

wheelhot
May 14, 2009, 02:04 AM
yup, I agree with what the others said, tell him that if he want all those stuffs added he need to pay more then $100, hmm next time maybe you can add website building at $100*, the asterisk is used to add your own T&C, so you can state like *includes basic web design, anything else will need to be discussed.

Honestly, I hate when people pay you little and ask for more, I did photography for an event and eventhough I'm not getting paid a lot but for me the importance is experience, but what pissed me of when the person said, I should take more photos and that I'm inefficient! I'm like WTF, the event just last about 40-50 minutes, how much photos you want? 200? and its those kind of prize giving ceremony event, all the crowd is just staring at the speaker and take their prize, nothing much to take photo of rite? Furthermore, the time spend after the photographs also is not taken into account.

iann1982
May 14, 2009, 08:18 AM
Can I just add my tuppance to this...

I'm a web developer, about 5 years experience, mainly working for enterprise level clients but have done a fair bit of smaller stuff.

The problem here is that you've set your price at $100, this guy values you as though your work is worth $100, from what you've posted, you've done far more than that.

If I were you, I'd charge more, create some templates and some fixed rules as to what you get for say $250, anything else is extra. You might think it'll only take 2-3 days, but then add factor things in like sorting your taxes, equipment costs, broadband etc.

It's not a race to the bottom, charge fairly for good work and you'll retain clients, people will always want more for less, but there's so many cowboys out there, I'm sure if you're delivering good work on time you'll do fine.

Consultant
May 14, 2009, 09:59 AM
Well in the future, describe what the $xyz amount will get them.

Good thing he didn't ask for more from the start and you're lucky you got the c note. As an artist I always underbid on commissions I always offered my design services for a reasonable fee which undercut the competition , but made sure to get half the money upfront so there was no waste of my time and I at least recover cost for time and materials used should the client suffer from buyers remorse. It also works out good for you if you have a policy which details the price structure upfront should there be extras added--always make sure the clients are aware of these from the start. Even starting out never seem desperate or cheap bastards will always try to take advantage of you, that's why 4 years later I still run a business(not a profitable one), but don't make more than a couple hundred a year doing it and hold a regular 9 to 5 to cover the bills, I think eventually the quality will win out though. Running a business is very hard work and sometimes in order to get through life those dreams have to be left on the back burner to simmer while you get your crap together.

"I always underbid on commissions" is your problem, that's why you are not profitable. You need to rethink your pricing.

maclover001
May 14, 2009, 11:20 AM
I'll tell him anything that isn't already done will face additional charges. If he refuses, I guess I'll just de-brand the site and add it to my portfolio as a failed project.

He seems like a bit of a nutbar. If I don't reply to one of his "Add this and this and this and do this" emails within two hours, he will quote it, and send it again with "Have you received my email?" or "Please complete this ASAP" or "Please get back to me about the following message", then he starts bashing MobileMe for rejecting his messages and that I should start using Hotmail.

After spending a day away from my inbox working on HIS project, I'll find 5 or 6 emails of him whining.

Yup, I'm definitely going to charge more.

Thanks for all your help guys.

snberk103
May 14, 2009, 11:24 AM
A learning experience, eh?!

This comes under contract law.... and even though a signed contract doesn't exist, I believe a contract was entered into. You made an offer, it was accepted, a benefit was exchanged. The contract was not fulfilled (i.e. the website was not finished) so you may be out the $100. If your client wants to be sticky, they can claim that you didn't deliver the web-site, and therefore are not entitled to the $100. It may depend on what your initial e-mail exchange was. If there was an email exchange that listed what you would do - then that forms the basis of the contract. The client may ask for more to be added, but if you don't agree it doesn't get added to the contract. Do you still have the initial email exchange? Do you say you will build website (with no limitations), or do you say a "small" website (or something similar)?

Your time was certainly not wasted. Besides all the code learning you've done, you have also learned....

1) Specify what the $100 gets the client.
2) Get a contract up-front. This can be as simple as an email exchange that lists what you will do for how much money, for small projects. For big projects get a signed contract.
3) Now you get to research who owns the copyright on the code you wrote. Remember that Canadian law is different than American law.

In a worst case scenario your client may threaten to sue you if you don't finish the website. If they do, I wouldn't sweat it. My understanding of Canadian law is that they have to show actual damages by your failure to finish the website. Since really all they can show is that the contract was not fulfilled, ie website not finished, all they can do is withhold payment.

But, I'm not a lawyer... I am a professional photographer who has sat through several workshops by a lawyer on contract law for photographers and our obligations. I'm assuming writing code is covered by similar civil law.

design-is
May 14, 2009, 11:25 AM
"I always underbid on commissions" is your problem, that's why you are not profitable. You need to rethink your pricing.

I agree, if anything, overbid slightly (not much, just slightly) and then the client can have a happy surprise when you're efficient enough to come in under estimate.

---

Back to topic, I agree with what others have said. Simply explain in a professional manor that the new features aren't within the original scope of the project and that they will cost an appropriate amount of money to implement on top of the work already completed. If he's reasonable and you explain it clearly, it will all work out fine. A plumber wouldn't build you a bathroom for £50 when you originally said you would give him £50 to fix your kitchen tap.

If there is an honest misunderstanding, you can always offer a slight discount on usual rate as a goodwill gesture, but never lower it to the point where you aren't profitable.

/Doug

Ttownbeast
May 14, 2009, 12:14 PM
Well in the future, describe what the $xyz amount will get them.



"I always underbid on commissions" is your problem, that's why you are not profitable. You need to rethink your pricing.

I never lost money either, If a commission fell through I at least recovered my costs for materials and labor. Underbidding is not always a bad thing if you know how to set up the contract to guarantee you won't totally lose in the deal. Many artists place too high of a value on their skills and lose in this market as a result because they do not understand that the services they offer are a luxury more than a necessity there is little demand for luxury items in this economy right now and many very talented artist lack that proper business sense because they believe they will be the next Picasso or Rembrandt.

Picasso was a poor womanizing starving idiot who really did not get much for his works though many were brilliant when he was alive and by the time he was alive the renaissance had been over for centuries. There are no longer very many rich patrons willing to spend for a commission on such luxury and his works really did not gain the millions in value till after his death. Rembrandt was one of the last from that particular era making a decent living as an employed artist--he was very well known for his detailed work on human anatomy.

Most artist these days romanticize the old ideal inappropriately--they don't understand that the way to be a successful artist these days is to give up the notion that they will create one great work and make millions.

I don't lack the business sense I understand I have to create a competitive product of good quality and be able to work in some small amount of quantity that appeals not only aesthetically but financially to the client--if that means I design a tattoo for somebody they can take to their local ink shop I get paid 25 bucks for the flash work and put the details of the copyright in writing with the client so that no other duplicates beyond the one ink to skin can be made without my express permission some tattoists won't touch my work because they only see the money in mass producing copies of the same flash those kinds of shops don't seem to stand the test of time either. I don't specialize in flash but it is a decent way of gaining clients for anywhere from 5 minutes to 3 hours of work sometimes with just a pen and paper.

If they are satisfied with it they get the tat done by a guy they trust and come back to see me for more unique designs at the same reasonable rate rather than pick some mass produced crap from the wall that might find itself on 100 peoples bodies. I will always underbid if it means I get the contract, break even, manage to come out of it with clients and free word of mouth advertising I have gained a small amount of success. Cash profit does not always equate to a successful business and at least I am not losing my shirt while I gain clients.

belvdr
May 14, 2009, 12:25 PM
Sounds like classic scope creep to me. When you agree to build a website, you issue a statement of work to the client, and have them sign. This shows what they will get for $100 and anything beyond that is extra.

AppleMatt
May 14, 2009, 12:50 PM
This is called "scope creep", and happens all too often. This is why in my line of work (software development for government clients) there's an awful lot of paperwork that happens long before a single line of code gets written, as people write down and review hundreds of pages of requirements documents. As a programmer I find this tedious, but it gives me the power to tell a customer or tester "no, I'm not going to do that, it's not in the requirements". If it's something the customer decides he really does want, then contracts get renegotiated, requirements documents get amended, and the cycle begins anew.

I read maclover001's first post and alarm bells ring in my head when I see terms like "now he wants" and "next he's asking for". The way to handle this in the future is to define up-front what the client wants, estimate how many hours it will take you to do the job, make sure it's reasonable for the price being quoted, then deliver the work. You might agree that the price quoted includes, say, up to 2 hours of extra work doing tweaks and adjustments.

If the client then says "great, but now I want", then you can stop him and say "I can do that, but that's beyond the scope of the original requirements, so let's agree on a price to do this additional work."

I'm quoting this because I think it's an excellent post and I want to be able to refer to it again.

OP: Just lay down the law with him, state he's taking a good-faith agreement way too far and the barrage of emails are unreasonable - you offered a website and he's taking a web-portal to create the next (doomed) facebook. I certainly wouldn't continue to work with him, he sounds too difficult. Find two smaller clients = less stress, more references.

AppleMatt

notjustjay
May 14, 2009, 01:08 PM
One other argument for pricing yourself higher is that you tend to filter out the nutbars. The "web design is so easy! I'm going to build the next Facebook!" guy is also the guy looking for the rock-bottom pricing. He'd pay you at $100, but when you price yourself at $250, he'll swear at you in disgust ("You're not worth that! Web design is so easy! I could...") but you'll then be free to take on clients who actually value your time.

Replace "web design" with "video editing" or "software development" or "home renovation" or whatever you like, the same principle applies. Price yourself away from the bottom-of-the-barrel clients. If a client truly can't afford to pay (say it's a charity looking for a website) then you can always extend a discount.

Consultant
May 14, 2009, 02:09 PM
One other argument for pricing yourself higher is that you tend to filter out the nutbars. The "web design is so easy! I'm going to build the next Facebook!" guy is also the guy looking for the rock-bottom pricing. He'd pay you at $100, but when you price yourself at $250, he'll swear at you in disgust ("You're not worth that! Web design is so easy! I could...") but you'll then be free to take on clients who actually value your time.

Replace "web design" with "video editing" or "software development" or "home renovation" or whatever you like, the same principle applies. Price yourself away from the bottom-of-the-barrel clients. If a client truly can't afford to pay (say it's a charity looking for a website) then you can always extend a discount.

Exactly. Yup. I don't do anything under $1000 in general.

TenPoundMonkey
May 14, 2009, 02:43 PM
Exactly. Yup. I don't do anything under $1000 in general.

Agreed- the point of a business is to make money. Clients (or potential clients) tend to value the work partly based on the cost. No professional will take you seriously if you offer the $99 identity system or a $100 website. That should buy them no more than an hour of your work. No successful designer or agency will consciously offer cut-rate bids. Unless that opens the door to guaranteed additional (profitable) work, it's not worth selling yourself short up front. If you were to get a multiple-project contract, then it's fair to discount it all a bit...

You need to have an agreement IN ADVANCE that lays out the scope of work (including a specific number of rounds of revisions, etc) and sets a price that you both agree to. It helps to have some sort of "changes to the scope of work outlined here will result in additional charges... ...costs do not include printing, stock photography, etc..." you need to specify all that.

Beyond the additional mistake of no contract/estimate, you should at least hit him up with an updated estimate each time he asked for something new. At this point, it's not really crazy for this guy to expect you to finish this as you haven't raised any concerns up until now.

...

@ Ttownbeast: I'm glad it's worked out for you so far and that you are seemingly happy in what you do, but you could not operate the same way if you were running a full-time business.

...

Everything I've said above applies mainly to running a business- if you are simply looking to grow a portfolio on your own time, then go ahead and do work cheap, I suppose... but you should realize that even though you're using the experience to learn, your "product" has a real value and you should make sure that you're compensated fairly.

maclover001
May 14, 2009, 06:51 PM
Hi,

This is essentially how it went:

1) He replies to my ad on CL:

Hi,

Can u build a social dating site for the vancouver area?

Thanks,

(His name)


I reply:

I can. When/where did you want to meet?

He replies saying we can meet at Starbucks at this date and this time. Our meeting went more or less like this. I have bolded some key terms:

Him: I just want something simple where local singles can meet. I want it to be easy for novices to use. I notice that Plenty Of Fish has too many buttons and it may confuse some people who don't use computers daily.

Me: So basically, people create an account and post a personal ad, and people reply?

Him: Yes, thats about it, plain and simple. I'll pay you when the site's done.

Me: Cool.

(We go our separate ways)

I install phpBB and find a nice red theme for it. I Make a nice simple logo in Photoshop, then go under the hood and change a few things (Mostly what the $100 is worth). I made it so genders, ages, looking for men/woman, and relationship status are under their username, I spend a good amount of time making a "hot or not" system (I didn't know phpBB didn't already have a karma system until then, and I couldn't find a plugin. Whatever, easy enough to make). Basically making it less forum-like and more dating-site like.

I email him back with my work, hoping that he'd like it. His response:

Hi (My name),

Can you make it so users can make blogs?

Sure, WordPress with some internal database work should accomplish that nicely.

WordPress installed. I spent a couple hours trying to get them to share a user database. WordPress is a huge P.I.T.A. to mod I tell you.

I email him back, and say that the blogging system is complete.

This is where I start to get pissed off. I paste an exact quote:

discussion boards, video uploads, groups, better logo. thx

I think this is the moment I should have said I'm increasing the price.
But because I consider myself quite a generous person, I leave it be.

Discussion boards were pretty easy to do, considering the entire site is based on one.
Video uploads? Good luck with that on a 2gb web host.
Groups? Please elaborate.
Better logo? Please don't diss my logo without reasoning. Thankyou.

We meet at Starbucks again, and he starts talking explaining what he wants, what the logo needs, etc. I then go back home and spend the next two weeks fulfilling his wishes. It doesn't even look like phpBB anymore.

I email him back saying I have performed his updates.

He emails back, this came just an hour ago (better reply before it comes again)

Hi (My name),

I want to start an advertising network like Google Ads. The dating site will use this system and I will sell it to other companies, I purchased the domain name this morning. Do you think you can give me a discount since u bult the other site already?

*ROLLS. EYES.*


So this is the story so far. I think he's expecting way too much of me.

My lessons learned:
1) Ask for 50% pay at the start, and the other half at the end.
2) Decide EVERYTHING at the start, and make him sign
3) Raise prices to avoid the "bottom of the barrel" people (Thanks to whoever said that)

slipper
May 14, 2009, 08:16 PM
He is definitely taking advantage of you. In future ads specifically state something along the lines of $100usd for a basic 4-5 page website. PHP, Flash, etc is available for an additional cost. It may be a month of wasted time at this point, but use it for the experience like what you originally planned to do.

wheelhot
May 14, 2009, 08:43 PM
We meet at Starbucks again, and he starts talking explaining what he wants, what the logo needs, etc. I then go back home and spend the next two weeks fulfilling his wishes. It doesn't even look like phpBB anymore.

Okay, reading that bold line already tell me the $100 is off, who the heck get paid for $100 in 2 weeks, you wont even survive w/ only $100 in 2 weeks. This guy is asking way too much, and well its good to be generous but this is wayyy too much. :mad:

Anyway $100 in 2 weeks means you got about $7 a day, that is just nutz, I rather work as a salesperson and earn more then that.

I want to start an advertising network like Google Ads. The dating site will use this system and I will sell it to other companies, I purchased the domain name this morning. Do you think you can give me a discount since u bult the other site already?
Wow, am I sensing another Bill Gates coming? That is how Microsoft got their OS nway, they bought it from some guy but of course they still paid for it more then $100 :D

Okay, enough of the BG story, if its me I just give him the phpBB thing only and scrap all the other stuffs, when I see "I want to start an advertising network", I'm already pissed of to begin with, forget it, and the second bold, wow, that is just too much, he is clearly ripping you off, I bet he will sell it for like $500 or maybe more depending on how successful his "site" is. And the last line is just a joke, this clearly show how many people do not know how complicated it is to build a website, most of them think its like a drop and drop thing.

But looking on the bright side, at least now you know there are such a cheap ass people out there, and it is wise to price your stuff properly :).

He is definitely taking advantage of you. In future ads specifically state something along the lines of $100usd for a basic 4-5 page website. PHP, Flash, etc is available for an additional cost. It may be a month of wasted time at this point, but use it for the experience like what you originally planned to do.

Excellent advice slipper.

nanofrog
May 14, 2009, 09:01 PM
This is called "scope creep", and happens all too often. This is why in my line of work (software development for government clients) there's an awful lot of paperwork that happens long before a single line of code gets written, as people write down and review hundreds of pages of requirements documents. As a programmer I find this tedious, but it gives me the power to tell a customer or tester "no, I'm not going to do that, it's not in the requirements". If it's something the customer decides he really does want, then contracts get renegotiated, requirements documents get amended, and the cycle begins anew.

I read maclover001's first post and alarm bells ring in my head when I see terms like "now he wants" and "next he's asking for". The way to handle this in the future is to define up-front what the client wants, estimate how many hours it will take you to do the job, make sure it's reasonable for the price being quoted, then deliver the work. You might agree that the price quoted includes, say, up to 2 hours of extra work doing tweaks and adjustments.

If the client then says "great, but now I want", then you can stop him and say "I can do that, but that's beyond the scope of the original requirements, so let's agree on a price to do this additional work."
Ye olde SRS. :D The basic logic is applicable in many fields as well. ;)

Nice explaination, BTW. :)

maclover001
May 22, 2009, 01:16 AM
Hrmm... been about a week, and I never got a reply...

Time for the ol' account suspension, I guess.
I'll give him another week, or else the suspension page gets a new tone....

EDIT: Pointed it to the wrong error page by mistake :eek:

The red text says "Please contact me for info", not "Payment overdue"

AppleMatt
May 22, 2009, 06:13 AM
I think you're too nice. You need to stop being nice.

AppleMatt

chaosbunny
May 22, 2009, 10:04 AM
I'm afraid that's a lesson everyone who works in the creative industries has to learn at some point. Yes I have, and when I read through all the excellent posts here, many many others have too. :(

In my opinion it's best to stop doing anything for this guy, even if it means you will never see your 100 bucks. He will continue to ask for more and more and more and if it's finished someday will ask if 80 $ is ok because it took so long.

Consultant
May 22, 2009, 10:32 AM
Forget about getting money from the guy. It's better not to have some people as customers. This person obviously doesn't understand the value of time or is trying to take advantage of you. Either way, the person is unlikely to give you your fair share. BTW, usually these things with low payments would get you say 50, 50 stake in the business.

You can still use it in your portfolio, or actually start the site yourself (with different logo, etc.).

Since he did not paid you, he did not own any of your work. =)

If he really wanted something, you can give him the first version of the site. That is completely reasonable. BTW, some people charge more for logo design itself.

snberk103
May 22, 2009, 11:18 AM
Just out of curiousity, who paid for the coffees at Starbucks? If you were paying, then with enough Starbucks time you might have already gone in a "negative profit" situation before even starting the work. :D

Seriously..... Whatever you do, don't do anything you will regret later (I'm thinking about the notice page on his site). You made a bad deal, move on. Don't give him anything that he can use to bully you or threaten you with. Give him the completed php stuff, the logo, etc. and tell him that you consider your business relationship closed. Then, since it sounds like you are in Vancouver, head down to the Small Business Centre in Waterfront Station. Link Here. (http://www.smallbusinessbc.ca/) Do some research on pricing, contracts, etc. If you spend $100 on coffee while you do your research there, you will be miles further ahead than that actual "job" you got.

Good Luck.

You have a couple of things going for you. You seem to be a hard worker, and you aren't afraid to ask for advice. The rest you can learn.

chaosbunny
May 22, 2009, 12:21 PM
BTW, some people charge more for logo design itself.

That could be a good idea. The op advertised "I'll build you a website for $100". That does not include a logo design.

Ok, website $100, international logo design with unlimited use $5000. :D

dornoforpyros
May 22, 2009, 12:40 PM
Haha so you posted that you would build a site for $100, and then even after the guy told you what he wanted (a huge social networking site) you STILL agreed?

You got yourself into this mess man, swallow your pride, email the guy and say "I'm in way over my head, I'm sorry to have wasted your time"

I'd have some sympathy for you except that this is well beyond standard "scope creep", you did this to yourself.

Ttownbeast
May 22, 2009, 02:19 PM
@ Ttownbeast: I'm glad it's worked out for you so far and that you are seemingly happy in what you do, but you could not operate the same way if you were running a full-time business.

Should it become a full time business again at some point for me there would be changes of course, but I would still continue to undercut my competition on principle and manage to profit. Like I said before too many artists take this for granted and expect to sell that million dollar work and gain instant fame (the same can be said for anyone starting a business. Anyone starting a new business understands that once invested they no longer live an 8 hour work day--every dollar they make is spent on the development of the business nothing is left for luxury. I tried that for the first year I was in business. I held a regular job paid my bills and anything left over after bills went into my business covering start up material costs (art supplies for the various media I am skilled in), Advertising (business cards, magnetic door decals, tee shirts, flyers for the college bulletin boards, and displays for storefronts willing to feature my work), transportation (fuel costs, parts, etc), online fees (paypal, ebay, site hosting services), shipping costs, space rental at swap meets every couple of weekends--there was a lot of overhead. That first year was a learning experience I manged to break even and for now I put it on the back burner, I may start it up again once I have the funds and the time to invest.

ChrisA
May 22, 2009, 03:35 PM
Looks like you have learned to write a contract up front BEFORE work is started. State the price and the work to be done. Then later the customer can request changes. You then write up the change and the price.

What I'd do now is wrap up the current work, make everything you agreed to do work and then say he can have that for $100. If he does not pay, then he does not get the work you have done so far.

Make sure the demo site you are writing has a limit of (say) five users. You remove the limit after you get the $100.

vivithemage
May 22, 2009, 03:42 PM
If he wants more things done then what was originally agreed upon, then you should be able to charge more.

maclover001
May 22, 2009, 05:17 PM
Just got a response. Apparently I'm "incapable of fair trade". I'd like to see him find ANYONE else do what I did for $100 :rolleyes:

I guess I'll try to sell the code in the Marketplace, or try and launch the site myself.

babyjenniferLB
May 22, 2009, 08:13 PM
Just got a response. Apparently I'm "incapable of fair trade". I'd like to see him find ANYONE else do what I did for $100 :rolleyes:

I guess I'll try to sell the code in the Marketplace, or try and launch the site myself.

Well as you are a "fair trade employee" you should demand your $1 a hour from him :p

But in all honesty i would start looking at the processes involved to sue him for the sum of the work done.

snberk103
May 22, 2009, 10:28 PM
< ... stuff snipped...>
But in all honesty i would start looking at the processes involved to sue him for the sum of the work done.

Did you forget your sarcasm tag? :rolleyes:

maclover001
May 22, 2009, 10:46 PM
im taking my business elsewhere, can u give me the unfinished site for free because you didn't finish it?

I think I just popped a blood vessel.

design-is
May 22, 2009, 11:35 PM
Hate clients like this. Tell him he needs to pay you the originally agreed $100 for which you will give him $100 worth of the work you've done for him. Then he can try and get someone to continue where you left off whilst you see if you have a case against him.

As others said earlier - you need to stop being nice. The time seems to of passed.

wheelhot
May 23, 2009, 12:15 AM
Stop being nice dude, just say no way Im giving you my work for free, dare him to go out and find someone who does all the work you did at $100, I'm sure those people who know how to do what you did will just laugh in front of his face.

But to save you some face, just give him the original plan if you want, before all those add ons, you know the first agreement before he asked you to add stuffs. This guy certainly don't know the worth of things, how old is he again?

But seriously, stop being nice, its nothing wrong being nice until people start taking advantage of you which I really hate! :mad:

chaosbunny
May 23, 2009, 04:09 AM
I think I just popped a blood vessel.

Just reply "no" and never answer him again. Since you never signed a contract, he can't sue you or anything. I really don't think you'll ever see any money from this guy.

jmann
May 23, 2009, 04:13 AM
I think I just popped a blood vessel.

Don't be frustrated. Just think of what this will look like in your portfolio, and all the experience you got from this project. You could easy change a few things on the site and use it for something completely different, I'm sure. :)

barkmonster
May 23, 2009, 04:28 AM
I'm in the UK but I'm sure minimum wage laws are the same in the US.

When I was in my early 20s, I did a 3 day introduction to business course and learned that the Duke of Edinburgh awards scheme wouldn't back anyone who couldn't prove in their business plan that they could turn over enough to pay themselves minimum wage after all the other overheads. In fact it's against the law to pay yourself less than minimum wage, even if the intentions are to build up the business with the extra money.

This guy paid for $100 worth on web design, the assumption would obviously be at both ends of the deal that the hours of work required would be enough to earn a living based on the average time it takes to complete a basic website design.

This guy has broken the law by demanding more of your time that necessary to complete a job that's clearly more complex than a standard website. He's the one employing you to create the site and by taking so much of your time, he's paying you less than minimum wage.

He should be liable for this surely?

Peter Maurer
May 23, 2009, 04:50 AM
I'm afraid you might never get any $$ for the work you've done here.

Whoever thinks he can start this kind of business with a $100 webdesign (that's roughly two hours of work in your business, right?) is either out of his mind or just another kid who thinks he's going to be the next Zuckerberg. I wouldn't be surprised if he didn't even have the $100 to pay you.

maclover001
May 23, 2009, 05:10 AM
how old is he again?

He looks early-30s.

I'll reply to his email asking for the agreed upon price.

wheelhot
May 23, 2009, 06:15 AM
He looks early-30s.

Wow, if you never met this person, I will think he is a 12 year old :rolleyes:

Seriously, like other says, who the heck starts a business at $100, a person offered to make my dad a full flash website and its at ~$750 :eek:

AppleMatt
May 23, 2009, 06:16 AM
He looks early-30s.

I'll reply to his email asking for the agreed upon price.

...and explain you've actually done about $xxxx worth of work for him, which is very much 'fair trade'.

Personally I wouldn't sell it. Assuming you have done more than $100 of work, which I don't doubt for a second, you should keep it for a future project. A descent client may want some similar aspects and you can just extract and pull them across instead of starting again from scratch. Your client will be delighted at the speed you complete and you'll be pleased you've laid the hard ground work. Everyone wins (except that tosser, but it's a valuable lesson for him so he also kinda wins).

That guys new name is 'tosser', by the way.

AppleMatt

wheelhot
May 23, 2009, 07:06 AM
excellent advice AppleMatt, I bet the amount of work you actually did actually worth about $xxxx, I do wonder though, if you are good at doing all these, why did you promote your service at $100 anyway?

Just wondering :)

&Ingonyama
May 23, 2009, 09:27 AM
I had a similar client to this when I first started with web design/development, to cut a long story short he basically ended up owing me about $250 for the hosting and domain name in the end I got so pissed off I just took down the whole site and sold his domain name on sedo.

Anyway what I learned from that is always draw up a contract stating exactly what you will do. When this is agreed demand a down-payment of between 20~50% - make sure they have paid this before you write a single line of code.

Also dude..no decent website can be worth $100 unless its a template that you will sell many times. You should really be charging at least $500 and thats just for a very basic static site.

dornoforpyros
May 23, 2009, 11:13 AM
He looks early-30s.

I'll reply to his email asking for the agreed upon price.

How much is your time worth to you?

Is it worth having any further emails with this guy?
Is it worth fighting over $100?

Keep in mind, that the second you accept money from him, he "owns" you in a sense. If you accept payment from this guy and say "here's what I've built, never contact me again" he still may because he'll expect some kind of warranty on the work you've done since he paid for it.

I'd say you have two options
1) Tell him no, and to never contact you again. This way YOU still own the site and can do with it as you please.
2) Give him the site for free and tell him that is it without any warranty and you will offer no support on it what so ever.

But I think accepting payment from him at this point is just digging deeper into that can of worms.

babyjenniferLB
May 23, 2009, 11:40 AM
How much is your time worth to you?

Is it worth having any further emails with this guy?
Is it worth fighting over $100?

Keep in mind, that the second you accept money from him, he "owns" you in a sense. If you accept payment from this guy and say "here's what I've built, never contact me again" he still may because he'll expect some kind of warranty on the work you've done since he paid for it.

I'd say you have two options
1) Tell him no, and to never contact you again. This way YOU still own the site and can do with it as you please.
2) Give him the site for free and tell him that is it without any warranty and you will offer no support on it what so ever.

But I think accepting payment from him at this point is just digging deeper into that can of worms.

Go for path 1. Tell him were to go and give him nothing but a smile.

wheelhot
May 23, 2009, 12:53 PM
Me vote for path 1 too

maclover001
May 23, 2009, 05:33 PM
Me vote for path 1 too

Yeah that's what I'll do.

*deletes his domain's DNS record from DNS servers, may consider redirecting to porn site*

Ttownbeast
May 23, 2009, 09:08 PM
may consider redirecting to porn site*
HAHAHAA that'll do it

Love
May 24, 2009, 01:05 PM
I'd price out fees. Add an extra, $35 (the cellphone companies love that number) fee for doing the blog. A $50 fee for doing message boards, etc...

Love
May 24, 2009, 01:07 PM
Yeah that's what I'll do.

*deletes his domain's DNS record from DNS servers, may consider redirecting to porn site*

If this was on eBay, your feedback would read:

"Instead of incredibly designed feature-packed dating site, I got a hardcore porn site.

Wouldn't buy from again. A-"

dmmcintyre3
May 28, 2009, 06:45 PM
What has happened now?

maclover001
May 28, 2009, 08:55 PM
What has happened now?

I haven't heard from him since.
I'm still trying to sell the site.

daze
May 29, 2009, 12:59 AM
I think you're too nice. You need to stop being nice.

AppleMatt

I agree. To run a business, you have to have the ability to know when to say no. Running your business is a luxury and the hard part is not working on delivering your work, but dealing with people.

I have a condo that I rent. I actually lose money on it, because I was in it to gain equity rather than income. So while that's not a bad thing, I would like now to raise the rent but don't really feel like knowing what if that is justified, etc. So I need to do research and see what other people are renting their similar condos at and then make a decision. Backing up decisions is sometimes essential because it gives you confidence and helps you understand the reasons behind it. ;)

My two cents.

Andrew Henry
May 29, 2009, 01:55 AM
I haven't heard from him since.
I'm still trying to sell the site.

And you never at least got the $100 you were owed? :(

maclover001
May 29, 2009, 02:13 AM
And you never at least got the $100 you were owed? :(

I got nothin' :(

jessica.
May 29, 2009, 08:29 AM
^ This is really your fault. You said you'd build a site for $100 and failed to outline terms and conditions. It sucks though that you never got your $100 but then again you never delivered a site from what I understand.

the vj
May 29, 2009, 10:04 AM
Well, very easy...

He asked you for a web site, you did it = $100

He asked you for something else = extra $100

And so on...

Let him know in advance that he has been asking for different sections that are individual projects themselves.

THEN you can bring him into your terms. Obviously the common sense says he is taking advantage but because you didn't set terms. On thing is you knowledge in doing somethjing and another new deal is marketing your talent.

AppleMatt
May 29, 2009, 10:09 AM
^ This is really your fault. You said you'd build a site for $100 and failed to outline terms and conditions. It sucks though that you never got your $100 but then again you never delivered a site from what I understand.

?
You understand wrong, because he did deliver the site according to the original agreement in Starbucks. Both morally and legally (UK) he's entitled to the $100.

The subject of this discussion is that he subsequently agreed to add entire new features (i.e. not part of the original agreement) out of little more than goodwill, partly due to inexperience and partly in the hope it would secure him a good reference. The fault lies in the fact he was nice to someone who took advantage, not that he failed to outline 'terms and conditions' (as these were settled in Starbucks). I completely agree however that a written spec certainly would have helped him say no to 'scope creep' (although I wonder if he actually would have). There's an excellent post I quoted previously about this.

It's therefore not particularly fair to look at his May 15th behaviour with the benefit of May 29th glasses and say it's 'his fault' - on the 15th he couldn't possibly anticipate just how far the client was going to push it. He certainly didn't have to add the extras, and the client can't force him to*, he was just being nice - but it doesn't change the position stated above. Personally I think he shouldn't sell the work done for $100, because he'd undervalue himself.

AppleMatt
*I can't imagine that a Westernised legal system would allow variation of contract without some form of consideration, which the client did not provide.

wheelhot
May 29, 2009, 11:34 AM
yup, I agree with Apple Matt

maclover001
May 29, 2009, 03:32 PM
I got nothin' :(
^ This is really your fault.

He left because I finally told him I won't take crap anymore. I suppose if I had kept meeting his demands until he finally decided it was finished, then got me rolling on the $80 ( :rolleyes: ) Ad site, I could have pocketed $180.

This way, I can at least sell the site for a good $800-900 (?), and learn to deal with people properly.

Pixellated
May 29, 2009, 04:20 PM
He left because I finally told him I won't take crap anymore. I suppose if I had kept meeting his demands until he finally decided it was finished, then got me rolling on the $80 ( :rolleyes: ) Ad site, I could have pocketed $180.

This way, I can at least sell the site for a good $800-900 (?), and learn to deal with people properly.
Either that, or debrand it and use it as an example page.