vote up 4 vote down star
3

In the past, I've always done independent contracting work for people and they pay me via a 1099. Never really a formal contract or proposal, etc...

I now have a software consulting company and will be invoicing customers under that name. I'd like to begin doing more formal proposals and contracts based on the work I'm given.

I've been burned in the past but it's never been for much money, but now I'm starting to do some pretty big jobs for start-ups (high risk) and I feel that I need to enter into legally binding contracts with companies that use our services.

Do you have any sample proposals and/or contracts that I can use as a start? I've googled extensively, but can't find anything good...

Also, what is the industry standard "retainer" or "upfront" payment that I should ask for? I've always done 25%, then monthly billing based on actuals...

flag

To be honest, I don't have any contracts with my customers, but i've done websites mostly and when i've done them, I always except them to pay before they get the final product. Answeres as comment because it does not address your real issue. good luck! – Filip Ekberg Jan 6 at 4:29
I found some very good advice on negotiation in Everything is Negotiable by Gavin Kennedy (amazon.com/gp/product/…) – bmatthews68 Jan 6 at 4:51
Haha, I love the StevenALowe edit (version 2 to 3) which is basically "s/the sh.t out of it/extensively/". – paxdiablo Jan 6 at 6:13

2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

talk to a lawyer in your state/province; don't just use something off the internet as your state and local laws may vary

in general, there's time-and-materials, billed periodically, and there's bid-for-component work; you can ask for whatever payment terms you desire, and negotiate from there

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Large companies you may work for will put the contract on their paper making your effort less rewarding.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.