Archive for the ‘Web Business Management’ Category

Bad Clients, Better Contracts

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

What do we do when the client \ company relationship falls apart?

Sometimes, the issue is bad communication, sometimes a client or the company does something incorrectly or takes too long on a project. This causes tension and it can usually be alleviated by (drum roll please)… a conversation. Yes, just talk to each other and try to work it out - apologize. Just be nice to each other.

After it’s worked out, try to have realistic expectations about hours, pay and service.

If that fails and the deal has gone sour, it is important to have solid contracts to rely upon. Without bad-mouthing anyone in particular, my design agency was zinged for a significant amount of production hours by a client that was essentially leading us on. Now, we should have seen this coming and demanded payment before any additional work continued. We like to give the benefit of doubt to our clients. Sometimes, this gets taken advantage of. We lost approximately $20k worth of production time because of our bad judgment. We should have done things differently.

What should we have done?

For starters, we needed a better contract, with stronger stipulations on time and payment. We should have made additional entries on the contract when new items came up. In this case, our communication was daily at the least, so that is not an issue. Secondly, we shouldn’t rely on a client’s “good nature” to mean that we will get paid. If they don’t have the money or want to get work for free, then their “good nature” can be a put-on.

I don’t want this to sound bitter - as we assume the responsibility for allowing extra production hours without a proper contract. It’s a lesson learned. We hope that other design firms stop relying on handshakes, promises, etc. and start relying on good contracts, solid due-dates with production work as well as holding clients to their payment schedules. If modifications are to be worked out, both parties should get them in writing to protect themselves.

Strengths and Weaknesses

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

I have a close friend and colleague that has been asking me to do a strengths \ weaknesses analysis of my company for months. Since the economic climate is changing rapidly and starting to affect the lives of all the web developers that I know personally, I have been trying to determine what we do best and what we do horribly. After we find a strength and weakness we make a change in order to help us keep up with what the future may hold.

One thing that I think we do well is give advice based on our experience as well as manage projects well when we have no stake in the development or design. We created a web project management division at http://www.thewebadvocates.com/ and we essentially become the best friend of a web development project for any given amount of hours.

I feel that pre-planning for web projects is something that we can help small through large companies with. It’s an exciting thing to be at the birth of a web project. We enjoy it and hope that our experience can help even the smallest company succeed with their web launch.

This seems like an advertisement, I know. But I want it to be a nod to my friend that pushes our companies along through tough times (and easy times), with good ideas and a bright outlook. Thanks…

Norma Rae, Eat Your Heart Out. The Web Designers Shall Rise Up!

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Banding together is tough. What is the common ground that attracts one person to the next professionally? Is it necessary to pull together in order to form a more perfect union of web designers?

I think the answer may be “yes”.

My company works with many other companies, as well as off-the-street clients. We have been through many ups and downs, professionally, financially and have been without focus as a business. As part two of my new years resolution, I am decidedly focused on myself professionally, as well as the direction of my web design agency.

Over the past few years, I have paid close attention to the cost and time associated with creating a good website. I have listened to my peers regarding the use of web standards. I have come to understand that accessibility is essential to developing a website worth a darn.

We develop a number of websites for other web design companies each year, sometimes because they are too busy or more often than not, they need an accessible and web-standard site created. Don’t get me wrong, we love the work. But if every web designer \ web design agency took a stand to create sites that are web standard, accessible and utilize techniques that are good for a site’s long-term growth, then I feel that the world of web design may be a better place.

What if there was an organization that allowed web designers \ developers \ agencies the ability to take an oath of sorts? The oath would be simple - create sites using web-standards, do not exclude those that have impairments and to be fair to our clients.

I know, touchy-feely. At first glance, I would agree. But I feel that we might be able to commit to something in order to be better at what we do and to serve the public. As web professionals, we are in a way public servants (once again, touchy-feely. Don’t hate me.). We don’t shovel snow, dig ditches, fight fires, arrest evil people nor put band-aids on wounds. We do however help disseminate useful information, help businesses grow and allow people to do things from their couches that were never before possible.

In return for this oath, I hope that the members would get something tangible. We need pricing standards (some web designers probably make less than minimum wage if you add up the amount of hours vs. the cost of a site), health-care, vision-care, colleagues to rely upon and whatever else it might end up being.

Just a thought.

I Need to Sleep More and be a Jerk Less

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

As a web designer, I often work nights. This is to the detriment of everyone around me.

When I say ‘nights’, I mean that I often work another full shift after 8 PM. Honestly, this is insanity. I have inadvertently setup the expectation with my clients that I essentially work 24 hours a day. I will get emails in the middle of the night with to-do’s for the next day. I can wake up after a few hours of sleep and I can have 25 emails that need tending to.

I have never, in my entire life, made a new years resolution. But this year, I have a number of them. The first one on the list is to sleep and start treating my web design agency as a normal business, that works normal hours.

I will always work a bit at night or whenever the creative or developmental juices start flowing. But I will no longer go to sleep at 3 AM, only to wake up at 6 AM. I have slept under twenty hours within seven days recently.

I’ve done this before in my life and I have found it very difficult to stop. Without knowing it, one enters sort of a manic state. The need to keep working is quite intense. It’s almost as if I have become a work-junkie. My wife jokes that I am going crazy - but it is only a half-joke.

My clients will be in for a change, this is for sure. My hope is that I will also be in for a change for the better. I hope that I am nicer to my family and friends. I hope that I can create more practical deadlines and meet them. I hope that everything is more manageable, realistic and most of all - that I am less of a jerk.