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Billing out of town clients


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I always tell first time clients, in or out of town, 100% up front. Once we establish a relationship AND the check clears we look at other options.

 

If they balk it is usually a bad sign. Most push back a little bit, but when I stand firm they make the arrangements they need to make.

 

I always ask about the check when I get on site, but then typically don't make them produce it until after the first day of shooting. If they are squirrely, I make them give it to me up front.

 

We can also take PP or credit card if needed as well to help make it easy for them.

 

This is our policy. Anytime we deviate from it, we end up chasing the money.

 

John

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Janice,

 

Las Vegas is a very last minute transient production city and frankly some of the local companies will hose you in heartbeat. 90% of production comes from out of town and probably 30% of that is International. Most of us here are strictly COD unless it's a bonafide payroll job. I have a Deal Memo that requires a signature and a Rental Agreement that all clients have to fill out. The only exception is when studios come they either have their own Deal Memo of sorts or they attach mine to their paperwork. The Rental Agreement is always required and we've never had a push back on it.

 

I'm still confounded why so many in our business offer credit or payment terms to people they don't even know. It's hard to name any other business, profession or industry who does that. I'm not saying you do that I'm just making a blanket statement.

 

As I've always been very transparent with my business practices I'll share the Deal Memo and the Rental Agreement with anyone who asks and you're free to take what you like or not. No PMs, email only.

 

Best of luck!

 

Robert

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Robert

 

Yes over the years I and thousands of others would work on a promise and I agree those favor days are gone

 

I often thought a cruel joke could be had on many of us "hi we need u in this place (many hours away) on this day with this gear." We would often blindly assume a production was there and it was but it just as easily could have been a hoax.

 

The point for all of us is leverage. We have it when they need us and can force payment. When the shoot is over and they leave or even locally the production company is now on equal ground and we are forced to prove wrong.

 

Time and money--all ours, to prove the wrong.

 

So just remember leverage.

 

(If they balk at payment then u didn't loose anything, in fact you won, you didn't work for nothing only to spend more hours chasing them.). It takes courage to demand. That's the hard part.

 

Janice.

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Dave

 

You can make your own agreement very simply first and if it starts to work for u then develop it further.

 

The simple sheet as a PDF or cut/paste into an email

 

1) what u will provide. Gear, personnel (you/assistant)

 

2) rate/time; OT starts when?; rate OT

 

3) payment due time on-demand? 30 days? PayPal?

 

4) extras? Mileage; extra rentals;

 

5) misc or additional stuff u want to include

 

You sign it and employer signs it.

 

Whether someone wil do an electronic signature God knows?

 

Lastly others have done this in the past but no one will sign it or I've had bad luck getting anyone to sign it which is why agreements seldom get used by ops but Robert seems to be better at this and can this done; I can't.

 

Legally I don't know how u enforce it either or whether it's worth getting a lawyer to make it up

Also remember some person who called and booked u and signs your agreement then something bad happens like u don't get paid and the owner of the company says he/she didn't have authority to sign anything and you're still stuck

It's way simpler and cheaper to just get paid via Paypal or check on the day of the shoot as others have described.

 

Good luck

Janice

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Rupert

 

Easier to use PayPal, credit card from set is easy for them.

 

Me getting them my bank info and expecting them to do it while doing 10 other things is harder

 

If you're quiet about it I build into my deal a little gap that covers the PayPal fees or I just maybe charge them 50% to get paid via PayPal or I eat the cost rather than loose out on getting paid at all

 

Depends on what u can get and how sketchy u feel the client is

 

Janice

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I've always done 30 day invoices but this is a very interesting conversation. I've never thought to ask for checks on the day, and wonder how many productions would actually do that. Bigger companies usually have no problem paying, but yes I agree, smaller unknowns should paying on the day. I only have about one or two issues a year with getting payed. I can be very persuasive ; )

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