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I am considering the move to the other side of development, as a contract programmer.

SO has given me a good few hints on the kind of figures to quote ( and why ), and a few points to bear in mind such as Non-competition and [IP Protection]

Having worked as a programmer for a while, I know that a few reasons for deadline delays may be -

  1. Estimates can be all over the place both from the Contractor, and the Job provider
  2. Things like bandwidth bottlenecks, merge for high-impact code etc
  3. Clarification time on provided requirements... etc

If you have worked as a contract programmer then

  • How frequently do you encounter a penalty/forfeit clause in your agreement?

  • What do you deem unacceptable in the penalty/forfeit clause?

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I'm not a contractor, but one would think not getting another job from them if they don't like your work should be penalty enough for them. – T.E.D. Sep 3 at 20:08

2 Answers

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Never

worst-case scenario: late delivery foregoes early-completion bonus

and you'd better have Acceptance Tests well-specified in advance of signing the contract!

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100% agree. Never, never, never sign a deal with a penalty clause for being late. ALL projects depend on the client to some degree to provide information and/or feedback along the way. This would simply provide an excuse for the client to take their time getting back to you causing time overruns. – Chris Lively Nov 12 at 3:26
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Steven is right. Never give a customer an excuse for penalizing your work. Your own question already lists reasons as to why and how a customer might be culpable in delaying your own delivery. In other words, adding any kind of penalty clause into a contract will create a perverse incentive for the customer to delay you.

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