I'm a college student who's had several internships and consider myself a decent programmer. I have a friend who does consulting work and who wants me to help him with one of his projects. Since I've never done any contract work before, what are things I should be aware of and watch out for?
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Invaluable advice: learn to say NO. Many times you'll find yourself in a position in which a customer asks for some extra features or many projects to quote at once. A good book I'd recommend is The power of a positive No. You must learn to say NO when appropriate: if you can't take more jobs because the day's just 24 hrs long, then decline them or clearly specify you could do them starting in, say, 1-2 months time; if some client insists in you doing something out of scope, say NO (unless it's a very important client and you see further opportunities through him, of course). Consider what you'd gain and what you'd lose by accepting and rejecting jobs, clients, etc. That way you'll see clearly what to do each time. Finally, charge what you should, no more no less, and for every single piece of work. If you're a good programmer and are good at understanding clients' needs, they will value that more than the money they pay. |
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I would never in my opinion try to do work for money with a friend because when money is involved you must treat them as a regular customer. Money can make your friend treat you as a real product price instead of a friend when things don't work as expected. So they would expect for you give them as much time as you would a usual customer. |
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Do you really trust your friend? Because as soon as money gets involved friendship usually is a burden more than a blessing. Make sure that you do have a written contract which explicitly states that your friend can not sue you over the software you are going to write for/with him. Of course the same is necessary for the actual party that will buy the software. You should make it absolutely clear that you are not backed by a company and that you therefore have to insist on a clause that prevents suing. |
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Depends where you're working from. Here in Ireland, and in most of Europe, you're better setting up a limited company and contracting yourself from that. Basically the issue here is that if something goes wrong, the company (with it's limited liability) can get sued, but not you personally. 'course given that you are a decent programmer, it's never going to happen ;) Still, one to consider. It's about 20 years since I've done any contracting myself, but the one thing I used to come unstuck on in the early days is pricing. Programmers often think of projects in terms of how long they take to code; you actually need to think in terms of how long you take to code, test, adequately document, install and train. You also need to price up the inevitable ongoing support. Lastly, signed license agreements between you and your client, that limit you or your companies total liability to the amount of money paid out to you, i.e. no consequential loss. Similarly, bugs are limited to failures in explicitly defined test cases, not vaguely understood / ambiguous requirements. Best of luck in your endeavours! |
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I bought this book - http://www.amazon.com/How-Succeed-as-Independent-Consultant/dp/0471469106 - How to Succeed as an Independent Consultant there is a huge list of things to consider and strategies to employ. worth it, plus you can write it off ;) |
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I wouldn't do business with friends. If you want to be a consultant - go with government or big corporate to start to get the ropes. Either that or use something that has a escrow/arbitration system like rentacoder.com |
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From a recent post from Scott Berkun,regarding "Should I quit my job now?" It contains some good inputs on consultation.
He also suggests to read Million Dollar Consulting: The Professional's Guide to Growing a Practice (Paperback) |
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A simple tip, but no matter who you are working with, get a written agreement stating what you will do and how long you expect it to take and make sure both parties have signed it. Doesn't have to be complicated or legalese, but you need to have it absolutely clear what you will do and what the success criteria will be by which your work will be evaluated and you will get paid. That way everyone knows where they stand. |
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Whoo boy. Down this road lurks madness. The most important piece of advice given your situation: define everything in writing. The most important information you need is as follows:
And this is just a start. Welcome to the world of contracting! This is what it's like when you aren't work-for-hire under a corporation's legal umbrella! :-D |
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My advice would be do the work, try and get paid as you go along - such as fortnightly so you don't get left hanging - and don't get too wrapped up in do's and dont's for your initial forays into the paid programming World. Contract programming isn't that different to any other job really. Apart from that some other advice would be if the job is interesting to you be flexible around the price. If it's not interesting to you (and you're not desperate for the cash) bump up the price. The highest paid contracting job I have ever had was hacking javascript to work between Netscape and IE. I only lasted 4 months after which I'd made enough for a 3 month holiday but in a way I actually resent having wasted 4 months of my life dealing with such a mind numbing task! |
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I have had many "friends" ask for help on a project, ask to hire me as a consultant, and offer the sky with their "awesome" idea that they have no idea how to implement, what it will cost, and how they expect to pay me for my services. These days when a friend approaches me with a great idea for a development project, I run. It is usually a "I will give you a piece of the profits/go into business with me" deal where I do all of the work and get very little if anything in the end. I would question what your friend's role in the project will be, how you will be paid, when you will be paid, when the project ends, and don't write a single line of code until you have requirements on paper, as well as a contract you can live with. Just my opinion... |
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Also consider the option of not working hourly. Some people consider this blasphemy, but if you can define the project well enough in the beginning, you can set a fixed price. As in "I will build a ruby program that does X Y and Z and you will pay me $800." I find that working hourly (and tracking time, and all that) adds more stress than it is worth to the job. YMMV, obviously not every project has good definable goals. (Of course if your project doesn't have good definable goals you may be screwed anyway... :) I have had many fine projects working with friends (and even family!) so don't let that aspect of it scare you too much. |
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It depends on what type of contract job you're friend wants help with. Hopefully, it's a lucrative gig he has with an established company which is paying him for his services. In this case he can plug you in, pay you an hourly rate, and all is well in the world. If the work is direct for your friend on his project, then I'd be careful not to jeapordize your friendship with a paying project etc. If your friend is contracted with a small company or there are any financial issues at that level, I'd also try to be a little bit careful about payment issues etc. In general, have fun, learn from it, try to figure out if it is a flakey situation or there is a steady payment stream for the services being rendered. In about 12 years time, I've very rarely had payment problems, the one time was doing work direct for a friend, and the schedule went over...so, it's probably easier to work by the hour than to try to estimate time/cost , especially as a beginner. |
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