Hi everyone,
I've got this client right now that's super picky about the furniture that is being used on an interior. His first suggestion was "British Colonial" style and he provided me with a couple of photos of the feel of the furniture but not the exact pieces (Dark woods with some whitish walls). I did my best to accommodate this and came up with some nice pieces. He felt that some of the pieces (predominately the sofas and dining room stuff) wasn't the right feel and we've been going on for several weeks now trying to get the furniture "right" but it is taking a huge chunk out of any profit I may have been making. Since my contract doesn't specifically state at exactly what point I'm done with the interior design, I feel like I'm out of luck until he's happy. Usually I have no trouble changing for changes but in this case they aren't Tully changes like I'm used to. (walls moving, changed windows, etc). Oh well, on this job I think I'm SOL but hopefully I can protect myself in the future.
So my question is how do some of you handle "furniture" selection and interior furnishings and how do you write this into your contract? I've yet to work on a job where the client actually has an interior designer with all of the furniture/finishes selected so I don't think I can just insist that every piece of furniture be selected prior to the start of work. I think this would be bad for me as well since it would mean I'd have to model each piece for each job rather than relying on some library pieces which would drive up costs (for me and the client) considerably. Anyone have any suggestions on how to address this?
Related to this, how do you setup reviews with the client of the images in progress? I tend to render out a alot of test images for client review prior to the finals to hopefully avoid surprises at the end. But I have also been advised by others to produce very few images for review and basically they get the final product at the end and if they don't like it, changes are extra. This seems rather unprofessional but would probably help the bottom line. What do you think?
Thanks for any advice,
David
I've got this client right now that's super picky about the furniture that is being used on an interior. His first suggestion was "British Colonial" style and he provided me with a couple of photos of the feel of the furniture but not the exact pieces (Dark woods with some whitish walls). I did my best to accommodate this and came up with some nice pieces. He felt that some of the pieces (predominately the sofas and dining room stuff) wasn't the right feel and we've been going on for several weeks now trying to get the furniture "right" but it is taking a huge chunk out of any profit I may have been making. Since my contract doesn't specifically state at exactly what point I'm done with the interior design, I feel like I'm out of luck until he's happy. Usually I have no trouble changing for changes but in this case they aren't Tully changes like I'm used to. (walls moving, changed windows, etc). Oh well, on this job I think I'm SOL but hopefully I can protect myself in the future.
So my question is how do some of you handle "furniture" selection and interior furnishings and how do you write this into your contract? I've yet to work on a job where the client actually has an interior designer with all of the furniture/finishes selected so I don't think I can just insist that every piece of furniture be selected prior to the start of work. I think this would be bad for me as well since it would mean I'd have to model each piece for each job rather than relying on some library pieces which would drive up costs (for me and the client) considerably. Anyone have any suggestions on how to address this?
Related to this, how do you setup reviews with the client of the images in progress? I tend to render out a alot of test images for client review prior to the finals to hopefully avoid surprises at the end. But I have also been advised by others to produce very few images for review and basically they get the final product at the end and if they don't like it, changes are extra. This seems rather unprofessional but would probably help the bottom line. What do you think?
Thanks for any advice,
David
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