- Original Poster
- #1
Hi,
I am hoping you can help me understand my options with a non paying customer.
We were recently asked to look into improving video performance on a clients’s specialist machine.
We explained that we could offer no guarantees of success as it will largely be down to the machine but we had a few ideas we could try.
They agreed in writing that they knew the work was experimental.
We agreed through email that we would spend 5 days working on it for X amount.
For the first few days of work it turned out there was a slight misunderstanding on our part, so we ended up spending 8 days working instead of the agreed 5. As the confusion was on our side we didn’t charge any extra.
Fast forward after the 8 days and it became apparent the machine just wasn’t going to perform any better. I visited the customer’s office and showed them our set up in person and sent them the files showing the various methods we tried. This was a very friendly meeting and it ended amicably.
Later the same day my developer got an email saying they had been disappointed by the confusion on the project. To which shocked me considering I had just left from their office and nothing was mentioned....and the fact we worked 3 extra days to make up for it.
A few days later I sent our invoice for the work, which would be due in 14 days.
A few days before the invoice became due I sent a reminder, which we do always.
The deadline came and went so I emailed again with no reply.
I phoned their offices and the client said I should ‘relax’ and that payment would be made that week.
That week then passed with no payment yet again, so this time I sent an email explaining that although it’s not the way I would like things to pan out I would take legal action should I continue to be ignored.
I was just hoping for some more opinions here if possible about what I should do next?
Any help you can give would be greatly appreciated.
Many thanks!
I am hoping you can help me understand my options with a non paying customer.
We were recently asked to look into improving video performance on a clients’s specialist machine.
We explained that we could offer no guarantees of success as it will largely be down to the machine but we had a few ideas we could try.
They agreed in writing that they knew the work was experimental.
We agreed through email that we would spend 5 days working on it for X amount.
For the first few days of work it turned out there was a slight misunderstanding on our part, so we ended up spending 8 days working instead of the agreed 5. As the confusion was on our side we didn’t charge any extra.
Fast forward after the 8 days and it became apparent the machine just wasn’t going to perform any better. I visited the customer’s office and showed them our set up in person and sent them the files showing the various methods we tried. This was a very friendly meeting and it ended amicably.
Later the same day my developer got an email saying they had been disappointed by the confusion on the project. To which shocked me considering I had just left from their office and nothing was mentioned....and the fact we worked 3 extra days to make up for it.
A few days later I sent our invoice for the work, which would be due in 14 days.
A few days before the invoice became due I sent a reminder, which we do always.
The deadline came and went so I emailed again with no reply.
I phoned their offices and the client said I should ‘relax’ and that payment would be made that week.
That week then passed with no payment yet again, so this time I sent an email explaining that although it’s not the way I would like things to pan out I would take legal action should I continue to be ignored.
I was just hoping for some more opinions here if possible about what I should do next?
Any help you can give would be greatly appreciated.
Many thanks!