Hi there, i've been lurking for a while and hoping some of you fine folk can give me some advice/confirm I'm proceeding properly.
From around 2010 until summer of this year I've done some on-and-off contract work for a consultancy. They'd take me on for around 3 months sometimes longer, here and there to do various things - mainly BA work, some technical documentation creation and so on. Basically whenever their order book grow too quickly for permanent staff to deal with.
Previously they always paid on time -i.e. within the 30 days agreed in contract.
Before the summer they decided to get rid of most contract staff and move to a permie only model. Fine, I thought, I'll go elsewhere, and I lined up an interesting contract that due to the nature of the project had a date it _had_ to start by. One of those 'clean room' projects where you can't talk too much about things due to a merger taking place, limited internet access and so on. I let the consultancy know I was only available up to a certain date and they were ok.
In the end, in this final contract I only managed to complete something like 128 of the 130 deliverables. This was complicated with the consultancies having technical problems with the platform they were using, as well as there being a complication in that any work I was doing was having an impact on another project and vice versa. Regardless of this, throughout my time on the project it was well known and accepted that it was a difficult situation. Because the endless technical issues were delaying my own work, the CEO of the consultancy called me and asked me, basically begged if I could do 3 days more. Due to the positive history I'd had, I agreed and called my new contract and made the appropriate excuses. Luckily they were ok with me starting on a later date.
I finished upand let the end client know I'd send out the last 2 bits after the weekend. There were only ever 2 days allocated for this work. Due to the pressure to finish things up in time before my contract expired, I had left these two, fairly discrete pieces of work until the end since they were isolated items. I got to these last two bits and realised that there was actually more than 2 days work needed. On the Sunday I had to fly to the city my new contract was based; and then on the monday myself and my new team were told no personal mobiles on site and all the usual things that come out of doing work that involves some kind of security clearance. Fair enough.
I finished up some of the work and sent what I could over to the Consultancy with my apologies. Explained that the work was taking more time then planned, and told them I'd deduct the 2 days from the time billed.
I expected that they would probably wanted to deduct more than 2 days, as the inconvenience is around more than just the deliverable, there's also the fact the client needed the work done on time and so on.
I sent across an invoice and apologised by phone for the situation but explained how unfortunately we had not factored in contingency time in what was a difficult project where the client asks for changes regularly and needs to be managed carefully on these. Whilst working on my new contract it was pretty hard to contact me due to the constraints of the project and my location etc.
I heard nothing at all re: the invoice.
Waited 30 days, still nothing.
Waited 20 days more and then started emailing reminders. eventually I got an acknowledgement that they were waiting for 'final approvals'. After more calls and pressure I get a phone call saying I will be called today (this was friday) but that there were issues around some 'remedial work' - the first time any query about the work was raised. I didn't get a call, and I've given them monday as a deadline when I will start applying interest to the quite overdue invoice (something like 70 days since I submitted it).
So, the 'too long don't read is'. Had a bit of a 'rough' end to a contract due to time pressures and small chaos toward end, it having a hard stop, and new contract having a hard start. Regardless, completed something like 98% of all the work. First time this has happened and have learned lesson not to be in this situation again. Client seems to be ignoring/playing hard ball with money.
Does anyone have any experiences in this situation? My view is I have to start charging interest as the payment is very late; and they've yet to even discuss any kind of payment. It's a sizeable amount of money.
From around 2010 until summer of this year I've done some on-and-off contract work for a consultancy. They'd take me on for around 3 months sometimes longer, here and there to do various things - mainly BA work, some technical documentation creation and so on. Basically whenever their order book grow too quickly for permanent staff to deal with.
Previously they always paid on time -i.e. within the 30 days agreed in contract.
Before the summer they decided to get rid of most contract staff and move to a permie only model. Fine, I thought, I'll go elsewhere, and I lined up an interesting contract that due to the nature of the project had a date it _had_ to start by. One of those 'clean room' projects where you can't talk too much about things due to a merger taking place, limited internet access and so on. I let the consultancy know I was only available up to a certain date and they were ok.
In the end, in this final contract I only managed to complete something like 128 of the 130 deliverables. This was complicated with the consultancies having technical problems with the platform they were using, as well as there being a complication in that any work I was doing was having an impact on another project and vice versa. Regardless of this, throughout my time on the project it was well known and accepted that it was a difficult situation. Because the endless technical issues were delaying my own work, the CEO of the consultancy called me and asked me, basically begged if I could do 3 days more. Due to the positive history I'd had, I agreed and called my new contract and made the appropriate excuses. Luckily they were ok with me starting on a later date.
I finished upand let the end client know I'd send out the last 2 bits after the weekend. There were only ever 2 days allocated for this work. Due to the pressure to finish things up in time before my contract expired, I had left these two, fairly discrete pieces of work until the end since they were isolated items. I got to these last two bits and realised that there was actually more than 2 days work needed. On the Sunday I had to fly to the city my new contract was based; and then on the monday myself and my new team were told no personal mobiles on site and all the usual things that come out of doing work that involves some kind of security clearance. Fair enough.
I finished up some of the work and sent what I could over to the Consultancy with my apologies. Explained that the work was taking more time then planned, and told them I'd deduct the 2 days from the time billed.
I expected that they would probably wanted to deduct more than 2 days, as the inconvenience is around more than just the deliverable, there's also the fact the client needed the work done on time and so on.
I sent across an invoice and apologised by phone for the situation but explained how unfortunately we had not factored in contingency time in what was a difficult project where the client asks for changes regularly and needs to be managed carefully on these. Whilst working on my new contract it was pretty hard to contact me due to the constraints of the project and my location etc.
I heard nothing at all re: the invoice.
Waited 30 days, still nothing.
Waited 20 days more and then started emailing reminders. eventually I got an acknowledgement that they were waiting for 'final approvals'. After more calls and pressure I get a phone call saying I will be called today (this was friday) but that there were issues around some 'remedial work' - the first time any query about the work was raised. I didn't get a call, and I've given them monday as a deadline when I will start applying interest to the quite overdue invoice (something like 70 days since I submitted it).
So, the 'too long don't read is'. Had a bit of a 'rough' end to a contract due to time pressures and small chaos toward end, it having a hard stop, and new contract having a hard start. Regardless, completed something like 98% of all the work. First time this has happened and have learned lesson not to be in this situation again. Client seems to be ignoring/playing hard ball with money.
Does anyone have any experiences in this situation? My view is I have to start charging interest as the payment is very late; and they've yet to even discuss any kind of payment. It's a sizeable amount of money.
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