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Crucial Information After Being Accepted By a Buyer

Dear John Smith,

Rent a Coder provides you with a number of unique protections that ensure that all transactions will be a safe and profitable one for you. However, too many times I have seen coders sabotage themselves by not using these protections and/or ignoring the site rules and guidelines. They unnecessarily lose time, money, their good ratings, and sometimes even their entire account on Rent A Coder.

To prevent this from happening to you, I’ve prepared this very important email for you. If you value your time, money or account on Rent A Coder, you need to read and understand everything below. Taking a few minutes now to do so may prevent you from experiencing a very large “headache” later on.

1) DON’T go offsite to communicate with the buyer.

After the buyer accepts you, you are highly recommended to continue to use the site comment system to communicate with them. When you do, all communication (including any enhancements, changes, etc) then becomes part of the “entire bid request”--which is the binding legal agreement between you and the buyer.

Some people choose to communicate with the buyer offsite (by email, IM ,etc.) rather than use this feature. I cannot emphasize enough how DANGEROUS this practice can be. If the buyer puts the bid request into arbitration, NOTHING that is communicated offsite can be taken into account. (The reason for this is that logs of all offsite communication can be easily faked and changed). This can present a serious problem for you. As an example, let’s pretend the buyer said you were to perform a certain task for them when they posted the bid request, but later told you they didn’t want it via an offsite IM message. The two of you later have a disagreement and they place the bid request into arbitration. You will lose the arbitration and the project, because the change to the specification isn’t documented on the site, and you did not deliver to the specification.

The safest thing to do is to do all your communication on the site….then you never have to worry about this. However, if you still prefer another communication channel (or the buyer insists on it), then there is another solution. After you complete your offsite conversation, document all the changes that you’ve both agreed on (which you should be doing anyway). Then post this to the site and get the buyer to post back a response saying that they agree to it. This will fully protect you in case of a dispute.

2) DON’T mishandle requirements changes.

Very few software projects don’t change somewhat as they are developed. There are generally two types of changes…minor changes and major changes. Mishandling either type can result in a lost arbitration or a loss of time and potential profit.

Minor changes generally don’t involve significant additional effort from the original requirements. When you and the buyer agree to this sort of change, make sure you document it on the site to avoid later problems in arbitration as mentioned above under off-site communication.

A major change involves significant additional effort outside the scope of the original requirements. When the buyer asks you for this sort of change, do NOT feel that you must automatically do it for free. This is especially important for you to remember if you come from a country/culture where “workers” are expected to always agree with their “bosses”, even when their bosses are “wrong”. That is not the way we do things on Rent a Coder. Remember, you are NEVER forced to do work beyond the original requirements you bid on!

When a buyer requests a major change, you are fully within your rights to politely inform them that what they are asking for falls outside of what you bid on. Explain to them why this is the case and why it will involve so much extra work. Then attempt to negotiate a higher price and/or extended deadline based on the extra work.

If you are successful, then simply document it all on the site (and get them to agree to it). If you've negotiated a higher price, ask the buyer to contact us to have us escrow the additional funds from them.

If you are not successful, then either the buyer will decide to drop the change (and things will continue as normal), or they will decide to pull out of the project. If they decide to pull out of the project, then this is considered to be a breach of contract by the buyer. If you’ve done work already, such a breach will result in a partial or full payment to you to compensate you for the percentage of work done. Additionally, it will NOT reflect negatively on your rating…although it usually will do so on the buyer’s rating.

3) DON'T allow lack of buyer response to affect you negatively

Sometimes a buyer doesn't provide you with requirements, clarifications or answers that you need to continue, or disappears entirely. If they do, those actions are beyond your control. However your response to those actions is in your control. Don't make the mistake of ignoring the situation, trying to guess what they want, or WORSE, doing nothing and hoping it will get better! If you get into arbitration and you've done any of these things, it will not be deemed an acceptable excuse for missing the deadline. Instead, follow the following procedure and then Rent a Coder can fully protect you if the project goes to arbitration:

a) Communicate onsite to the buyer exactly what you need and why you need it:
ex. "John Smith, I need the answers to those questions I asked you about yesterday. If I don't have those, I can't build the payment portion of the GUI which is one of your requirements. Much further delay will affect my ability to deliver this project on time. Please respond so I can
continue."

b) Hopefully they will respond positively. If they don't, then tell them how their lack of response has affected the deadline onsite.
ex "John I still haven't heard back from you. I committed to a deadline because I counted on you responding on a more timely basis. Since that hasn't happened I must warn you that I will need x more days now to complete this project. If you don't want to continue, then please let me know and we
can put this into arbitration for a cancellation. Otherwise, please extend the deadline on the site. Either way I would love to hear back from you. Thanks."

c) If they respond positively, that is great. If they ask for arbitration, you will receive a partial payment for work completed and not receive a bad rating. The buyer may receive a poor rating.

d) If they don't respond at all, then put the project into arbitration. We will protect coders that follow the above procedure, and if the buyer don't respond to our arbitration request either, the buyer will receive a bad rating and you will receive a partial (or full) payment for work completed.
 

4) DON’T mismanage deadlines

Too many times I’ve seen uninformed (and occasionally lazy) coders mismanage one or more of the 3 bid request deadlines and lose arbitration unnecessarily. To protect yourself, make sure you do the following 3 things:

a) DO file status reports every Friday.

On projects above $150 you have agreed to file a weekly status report on Friday. Don’t forget! If you do not do this, not only will your rating be penalized but if the buyer reports that he does not wish to continue with you, you will lose the project. Please don’t force us to arbitrate against you.

b) DO upload the complete deliverables before the deadline.

This is something else you’ve agreed to that you cannot forget. You MUST upload 100% of the completed deliverables to the site before the deadline. If there is a dispute and we need to test your deliverables, this is what we will test. If you do not do this, and the buyer puts the bid request into arbitration, you will automatically lose. We cannot accept deliverables uploaded after the deadline, because that gives an unethical coder additional time to fix bugs, etc.

If you have problems uploading large files to the site due to your connection speed or distance from us, email the facilitator your attachment and they can assist you. But make sure this is handled well in advance of the deadline, to allow for any time delay, email size limit problems, etc..

c) DO renegotiate the deadline if you know you can’t make it.

You should be communicating with the buyer regularly. However, if you are run into a problem that will force you to miss the deadline, you need to take extra care to let them know (on-site) exactly what the problem is. Often you can get them to renegotiate the deadline. If so, then preferably you should get the buyer to contact us to officially extend the deadline shown on the site. This will give you the maximum protection.

5) DON’T Use 3rd party code without understanding all copyright ramifications and explaining it to the buyer on site.

Many coders think they can get a jump start on finishing a project by using 3rd party code that they don’t own. However, most 3rd party code (including open source code such as GPL, GNU, etc.) is covered by a license that places some sort of restriction on the buyer regarding full copyright of the code. This of course is in violation of the standard request that most buyers require…100% copyright with no restrictions.

If you are going to include 3rd party code, then you need to take special precautions. Explain the copyright ramifications to the buyer and then get their approval (on site). If you don’t understand the ramifications yourself (or you just want to be safe) then a smart procedure is to upload the entire license for the buyer to view, and ask them to approve or disapprove it.

You may come from a country where copyrights are not strongly enforced and feel the above is not important to you. However, our company is based in the United States, where violating a copyright can result in a party being sued, so we take it very seriously. Via many of the international treaties that the U.S. has with other countries, this can result in you being sued as well. Regardless…if the buyer reports that you are infringing copyright, and we confirm it, you will not only lose the project, but can also lose your account as well. It is in your best interests to take copyrights seriously.

6) DON’T forget to use mediation/arbitration if you need to.

Some coders are under the false impression that mediation/arbitration is just for buyers, but that isn’t true. Mediation/arbitration is designed to protect coders as well. If your buyer is not responding to your questions on a timely basis, won’t accept your final work or is getting “out of control”, make sure you contact a Rent a Coder arbitrator. They are there to help you.

6) DO read and understand your entire contract.

How many times have I heard a coder complaining about a lost arbitration say “But I didn’t realize I promised to do that! If I had I never would have done what I did…”, or “Oh, if I had known about that arbitration rule back then, I would have told you about such and such and that would have turned the arbitration around…”?

Don’t let this happen to you. It’s crucial that you read your contract from top to bottom…taking special note of all of the rules of arbitration. It is located at http://www.rentacoder.com/RentACoder/misc/Legal.asp and is purposefully written in a non-legalese language to allow you to understand it more easily. However, if you still don’t understand something in it, then don’t hesitate to ask us at xxxx@xxxx.com  and we’ll be more than happy to explain it to you.  (The previous email address was not put on the Internet to avoid spam harvesting...please use the feedback page and then choose 'legal' to contact us regarding this).

Don’t put this off. Rent a Coder is making you money, so you should treat it like a job rather than a hobby. Arm yourself with as much knowledge as possible. It will only help you in the long run.

I congratulate you on winning your recent bid request, and hope that the information presented in this letter will allow you to be more successful and profitable on Rent a Coder. If you have any questions on anything you’ve read, don’t hesitate to contact us for a clarification. You can do this at: http://www.rentacoder.com/RentACoder/misc/Feedback.asp. I wish you well on this project and all your future projects on Rent a Coder.

Sincerely,
Julia Robertson
Rent a Coder

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IISPROD11 at 3/14/2010 4:36:33 AM