bmattock
Veteran
Got a call from a friend who works for the city several nights ago in a management position. She was hosting a community outreach type forum at a city building and had asked the local paper to send over a photographer to cover the event - the local paper had agreed, but never showed. The event was in progress when she called me.
Could I come over, take photos of the event, and bill the city? Right now, this instant? Sure.
I did *not*...
a) ask for a purchase order number.
b) negotiate an hourly rate.
c) negotiate rights to publication of the photos.
d) state a fee upfront.
Sigh.
What I did was to grab my camera and head out the door.
I arrived, took a total of 70 photos with my DSLR, including shots of the audience, speakers, city employees, and so on. I was asked to stay afterwards to take posed shots of city employees, which I did.
I was there roughly an hour, maybe a bit longer. I spent two hours processing the shots and preparing a CD-ROM, which I delivered to my friend the next morning.
She is very pleased and asked me to submit an invoice. I asked her if she wanted to give me a P.O. number, she said no, just give her the invoice on my company letterhead and she'd take care of it. She also said that she has given the photos to another city employee who is working with the newspaper to put together a news story featuring my photos.
I asked her if she thought that $200 was reasonable for the service I provided, she responded that she thought $100 was much more reasonable and in line with what she expected to pay.
I'm ok with that - but I don't want to set a baseline of expectation for future jobs with the city that hurts me financially. However, I also don't want to offend and risk not getting called again. Argh. I really think that $200 is not unreasonable for my time and the fact that I responded instantly at 8:30 pm, abandoning my dinner and off to the races I went.
We also didn't discuss who owns the photos - so I'm prepared to wave bye-bye to the copyright, assuming I even own the copyright in this mess.
Anybody want to venture their opinion on:
a) What I did wrong?
b) What to do right in the future?
c) What to do now?
I'd sure appreciate it. I'm such a knucklehead sometimes...
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
Could I come over, take photos of the event, and bill the city? Right now, this instant? Sure.
I did *not*...
a) ask for a purchase order number.
b) negotiate an hourly rate.
c) negotiate rights to publication of the photos.
d) state a fee upfront.
Sigh.
What I did was to grab my camera and head out the door.
I arrived, took a total of 70 photos with my DSLR, including shots of the audience, speakers, city employees, and so on. I was asked to stay afterwards to take posed shots of city employees, which I did.
I was there roughly an hour, maybe a bit longer. I spent two hours processing the shots and preparing a CD-ROM, which I delivered to my friend the next morning.
She is very pleased and asked me to submit an invoice. I asked her if she wanted to give me a P.O. number, she said no, just give her the invoice on my company letterhead and she'd take care of it. She also said that she has given the photos to another city employee who is working with the newspaper to put together a news story featuring my photos.
I asked her if she thought that $200 was reasonable for the service I provided, she responded that she thought $100 was much more reasonable and in line with what she expected to pay.
I'm ok with that - but I don't want to set a baseline of expectation for future jobs with the city that hurts me financially. However, I also don't want to offend and risk not getting called again. Argh. I really think that $200 is not unreasonable for my time and the fact that I responded instantly at 8:30 pm, abandoning my dinner and off to the races I went.
We also didn't discuss who owns the photos - so I'm prepared to wave bye-bye to the copyright, assuming I even own the copyright in this mess.
Anybody want to venture their opinion on:
a) What I did wrong?
b) What to do right in the future?
c) What to do now?
I'd sure appreciate it. I'm such a knucklehead sometimes...
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks