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Contracts For Your
Customers, Ink It On Paper
by Sam Weston
When you're dealing with customers, sometimes things can go wrong. It might
be your fault, it might be their fault or it might be no-one's fault --
but if you didn't make a contract, then you'll all suffer.
Why Do I Need Contracts?
A contract gives you a sound legal base for your business, and some guarantee
that you're going to get paid for your work without you having to ask the
customer for payment in advance. In the event of a dispute, the contract
lays down what the agreement was so that you can point to it and say what
was agreed. If you ever end up having to go to court (let's hope you won't),
the contract is what the judge's decision will be based on.
Without a contract, you leave yourself vulnerable and open to exploitation.
Someone could claim that the terms they agreed with you were different to
what you say they were, or that they never signed up for anything at all
and so they won't pay. It's especially common to see big businesses mistreat
small ones, thinking that they won't have the knowledge or the money to
do anything about it. Essentially, contracts take away your customers' ability
to hold non-payment over your head, and give you the ability to hold it
over theirs instead.
Written and Verbal Contracts.
It is important to point out the distinction in the law between a verbal
(spoken) contract and a proper, written one. A verbal contract is binding
in theory, but in practice can be very hard to prove. A written contract,
on the other hand, is rock-solid proof of what you're saying.
You might think that you're never going to get into a dispute with your
customers, but it's all too common to find yourself in a little disagreement.
They will often want to get you to do some 'small' amount of extra work
to finish the job or make it better, not realising that doing so would completely
obliterate your profit margin.
For this reason, you should be very wary of doing anything with nothing
but a verbal contract. On the other hand, if you were incautious or too
trusting and only got a verbal contract, it could still go some way towards
helping you, especially if there were witnesses.
Won't It Be Expensive?
Written contracts don't necessarily need to be formal contracts, which are
drawn up by a lawyer with 'contract' written at the top and signed by both
parties. These kinds of contracts are the most effective, but can be expensive
to have produced, not to mention intimidating to customers.
The most common kind of written contract, oddly enough, is a simple letter.
If you send a customer a letter (or, indeed, an email) laying out your agreement
before you start work, and they write back to agree to it, that is enough
to qualify as a written contract, with most of the protections it affords.
If you are doing high-value work for some clients, though, it could be worth
the time and trouble of having your lawyer write a formal contract, or at
least of doing it yourself and getting a lawyer to look it over. Formal
contracts will give you more protection if the worst happens, and there's
nothing to stop you from making it a one-off expense only by re-using the
same contract for multiple customers.
Contracts for Small Purchases: the Terms and Conditions.
Obviously it would be silly to expect everyone who buys some $10 thing from
you to sign a contract, or write back indicating their agreement to your
terms. In this situation, you should have a statement of the 'terms and
conditions' that your customer is agreeing to by buying from you, and they
should have to tick some kind of box indicating their agreement before you
send anything.
Luckily, it isn't usually so necessary to be paranoid about contract law
with small purchases anyway, since customers will be paying you first and
receiving the goods or services afterwards, not the other way around. If
you plan to offer any kind of payment plan or other long-term agreement,
of course, this should always be backed up with a signed contract.
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