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First, you have to change your terminology.

There is a HUGE difference between "cheap" and "inexpensive." Make this absolutely clear to your customer, and you'll have won half the battle.

The next thing is to make sure you are adequately selling yourself. Don't try to tell them that you're better equipped to handle the project than the other person, SHOW them.

  • Demonstrate that you have a better grasp on their particular project
    • Ask intelligent questions
    • Write everything down in a nice bullet list
  • Draw a system diagram that shows how you might implement the project given what you know about it.
    • Teach them about the components you've drawn and why they're important to their project

There are a lot of things in this vein, but at the end of the day you want them to walk away from you thinking, "This guy could implement my system in his sleep."

The second objective here is to fill them with information that the other coder might not be able to similarly answer. Done right it's not simply filling them with buzzwords, but with real concrete information that raises issues a poor programmer wouldn't be able to deal with right off the cuff.

Lastly, don't worry about it.

You REALLY don't want the customer that cares more about price than quality. If the above hasn't convinced them that you are the better programmer, please, please throw them to the wolves, if only for your sake. They are NOT worth your time and energy, until they've been burned once or twice.

It doesn't sound nice, but don't spend your life chasing after bad clients. If you are a good programmer it may take awhile to grow your business, but the clients you have will be worth having, and you won't be tearing your hair out.

-Adam

show/hide this revision's text 1

First, you have to change your terminology.

There is a HUGE difference between "cheap" and "inexpensive." Make this absolutely clear to your customer, and you'll have won half the battle.

The next thing is to make sure you are adequately selling yourself. Don't try to tell them that you're better equipped to handle the project than the other person, SHOW them.

  • Demonstrate that you have a better grasp on their particular project
    • Ask intelligent questions
    • Write everything down in a nice bullet list
  • Draw a system diagram that shows how you might implement the project given what you know about it.
    • Teach them about the components you've drawn and why they're important to their project

There are a lot of things in this vein, but at the end of the day you want them to walk away from you thinking, "This guy could implement my system in his sleep."

The second objective here is to fill them with information that the other coder might not be able to similarly answer. Done right it's not simply filling them with buzzwords, but with real concrete information that raises issues a poor programmer wouldn't be able to deal with right off the cuff.

Lastly, don't worry about it.

You REALLY don't want the customer that cares more about price than quality. If the above hasn't convinced them that you are the better programmer, please, please throw them to the wolves, if only for your sake. They are NOT worth your time and energy, until they've been burned once or twice.

It doesn't sound nice, but don't spend your life chasing after bad clients. If you are a good programmer it may take awhile to grow your business, but the clients you have will be worth having, and you won't be tearing your hair out.

-Adam