Jarrod Whaley
October 2nd, 2006, 11:53 PM
How many times have you done a job to the best of your ability given the resources at your disposal only to find out that your client expects you to bust your a$$ doing work for them, but can't be bothered to write you a check until six weeks have passed? Here are some of my favorite excuses:
1) "Oh, sorry... it's the end of our fiscal year and our bookkeeper is in the process of changing over the books." OK, fine. So you do another job for them six months later and hear: "Oh, sorry... it's the end of our fiscal year and our bookkeeper is in the process of changing over the books."
2) "Oh, sorry... our bookkeeper is on vacation for the next two months and apparently no one around here has the proper level of training to manipulate a pen in a fashion sufficient to write a check, much less to gather enough neurons to realize that we could do just that and then give an invoice marked 'paid' to the bookkeeper later. See you in September! I hope you like Ramen noodles!"
3a) "Oh, sorry... Mr. Whatshisname from our other office wants you to trim 3 seconds from the running time. Yes, I know we said the project was complete on the phone yesterday, but Mr. Whatshisname just now got this brilliant idea of trimming 3 seconds from the project. I'm sure the course of Western Cinema will be forever altered by the step of trimming three seconds from this marketing video. Anyway, I'm told that we'll pay you once you've done that. I'm sorry we didn't tell you this before you spent many otherwise unproductive hours rendering this edit and burning 5 now-wasted DVD's that we didn't budget for anyway, and then drove 45 minutes to get here in your gas-guzzling wreck of a car for no reason whatsoever. Oops!"
3b) (the next day) "Oh, sorry... Mr. Whatshisname wants you to move an apostrophe in the opening titles. Will that be hard to fix?" (note: this last query is invariably posed with the utmost in feigned concern, often constituting a performance worthy of an Oscar nod)
3c) (the third day) "Wow, it looks great! You can expect a check sometime in the next six weeks. No, it's hard to say exactly when it'll be ready, I'm sorry. We'll be sure never to call you and let you know when the check has been cut, so that you can feel like a groveling hobo when you call to beg for it every day beginning two months from now. Thanks! We love the video! I hope your landlord understands the unprofessional nature of our business dealings when you tell him you can't pay the rent!"
1) "Oh, sorry... it's the end of our fiscal year and our bookkeeper is in the process of changing over the books." OK, fine. So you do another job for them six months later and hear: "Oh, sorry... it's the end of our fiscal year and our bookkeeper is in the process of changing over the books."
2) "Oh, sorry... our bookkeeper is on vacation for the next two months and apparently no one around here has the proper level of training to manipulate a pen in a fashion sufficient to write a check, much less to gather enough neurons to realize that we could do just that and then give an invoice marked 'paid' to the bookkeeper later. See you in September! I hope you like Ramen noodles!"
3a) "Oh, sorry... Mr. Whatshisname from our other office wants you to trim 3 seconds from the running time. Yes, I know we said the project was complete on the phone yesterday, but Mr. Whatshisname just now got this brilliant idea of trimming 3 seconds from the project. I'm sure the course of Western Cinema will be forever altered by the step of trimming three seconds from this marketing video. Anyway, I'm told that we'll pay you once you've done that. I'm sorry we didn't tell you this before you spent many otherwise unproductive hours rendering this edit and burning 5 now-wasted DVD's that we didn't budget for anyway, and then drove 45 minutes to get here in your gas-guzzling wreck of a car for no reason whatsoever. Oops!"
3b) (the next day) "Oh, sorry... Mr. Whatshisname wants you to move an apostrophe in the opening titles. Will that be hard to fix?" (note: this last query is invariably posed with the utmost in feigned concern, often constituting a performance worthy of an Oscar nod)
3c) (the third day) "Wow, it looks great! You can expect a check sometime in the next six weeks. No, it's hard to say exactly when it'll be ready, I'm sorry. We'll be sure never to call you and let you know when the check has been cut, so that you can feel like a groveling hobo when you call to beg for it every day beginning two months from now. Thanks! We love the video! I hope your landlord understands the unprofessional nature of our business dealings when you tell him you can't pay the rent!"