GMcD
Mechanical
- Dec 20, 2004
- 399
I did a search and found "some" discussion about this a few years back, but thought I'd throw this out for opinions and comments:
Nearly 90% of my clients (architects mainly, with the odd developer direct client) take over 90 days to pay invoices - "It's our policy not to pay consultants till we are paid...", and the old - can you revise this in your invoice and re-send, buying another 30 days before they need to pay.
We have a policy here of getting the Client to sign a fee proposal letter, which clearly states our terms are "30 days from receipt of invoices". I tell them - our fee agreement is with YOU, not your client, so I don't care when he pays you.
After being yelled at yesterday by a delinquent client who told me "if I didn't like working for them, there are plenty of other consultants out there...." after I pointed out that my motivation might be better to provide a bunch of edits, and another deadline change later in the week if our invoices were paid more promptly....I need to vent.
Basically we MEP types have become a commodity, and we have all accepted, for some reason, that we must provide fixed fees for unknown amounts of work, and deal with way too much scope creep, and if we can't even collect the basic fees, let alone start asking for additional services fees, what does one do? I keep getting told "that's the way this industry is, you have to deal with it..."
Basically if "all" the clients out there that we MEP consultants are servicing are all taking 90+ days to pay invoices, I can't go with the old "find better Clients" advice. So, do I keep raising my fees to cover the fact that I am helping finance the Clients' project? Then lose work to lower fee consultants......?
Nearly 90% of my clients (architects mainly, with the odd developer direct client) take over 90 days to pay invoices - "It's our policy not to pay consultants till we are paid...", and the old - can you revise this in your invoice and re-send, buying another 30 days before they need to pay.
We have a policy here of getting the Client to sign a fee proposal letter, which clearly states our terms are "30 days from receipt of invoices". I tell them - our fee agreement is with YOU, not your client, so I don't care when he pays you.
After being yelled at yesterday by a delinquent client who told me "if I didn't like working for them, there are plenty of other consultants out there...." after I pointed out that my motivation might be better to provide a bunch of edits, and another deadline change later in the week if our invoices were paid more promptly....I need to vent.
Basically we MEP types have become a commodity, and we have all accepted, for some reason, that we must provide fixed fees for unknown amounts of work, and deal with way too much scope creep, and if we can't even collect the basic fees, let alone start asking for additional services fees, what does one do? I keep getting told "that's the way this industry is, you have to deal with it..."
Basically if "all" the clients out there that we MEP consultants are servicing are all taking 90+ days to pay invoices, I can't go with the old "find better Clients" advice. So, do I keep raising my fees to cover the fact that I am helping finance the Clients' project? Then lose work to lower fee consultants......?