Koeketiene
Well-Known Member
Thanks again everyone. Laura and Nat will be fine without me![]()
There - fixed that for you.
Thanks again everyone. Laura and Nat will be fine without me![]()
First and probably the most important rule is keep your lines of communication open![]()
What are you nuts???
You've got a tasty staff job which pays the bills and you are leaving that to go freelance???
In this economy?
Have you seen what's happening in the industry??
Well, good luck either way but I think your bonkers!
I always appreciated the good sense in your posts.
.... and get used to chasing invoices. If you find a client who pays before time, love and cherish them.
On the other hand, you will never again be able to turn away any job.
Too late for you.Beware people asking for a demo then using that work and counting that as keeps and all they need, I had that; mark everything, every image with your name and try to get promises of future work on the strength of it in writing.
Good luck Graham, don't forget to set your prices high enough to cover salary & pension & tax & profit & expenses & everything else. It's easy to fall into the trap of thinking you have to set your price low to get the work, but I have found it doesn't really work like that : stick it to 'em and be firm when they ask for a price drop.
Boo2
Nice idea. It used to work. But it is a war-zone in photography these days. Clients expectation have dropped. Those who do want proper quality want it at the lowest possible price.If they want a price drop, offer them a cheaper option, shorter time, fewer pics, no editing, whatever it is that gets the price down, but will not quite give the result they want - and make it clear that the penalty of cheapness will be a poorer outcome. Then offer the the extras to produce the quality they need at a slightly higher price.![]()
Anybody can do a cheap job, but you have to sell the "Quality saves money in the long term" aspec.
Those who do want proper quality want it at the lowest possible price.