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must watch... "LIFE AFTER PI" !!!
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Fascinating and very sad. I was aware the industry was in a mess but not quite this bad. Fingers crossed things start to improve for everyone now that we're climbing out of recession at last.
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A lawyer I spoke with once said, "Bankruptcy, the wild card in business." Walt Disney went bankrupt multiple times. I wonder what Rhythm and Hues will morph into out of this. Will they still use bad business practices that led to their demise?
I once was in a meeting where a partner volunteered me to do free work for a client. After the meeting, I told the partner I had no interest in doing free work for anyone. He ended up doing the work himself. The company eventually went belly up. No surprise.
mh
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Originally posted by lukx View PostAnd what were the bad business practices of R&H ?
Not charging extra for client changes after the job was delivered...
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The way people do business is different of course. In case of RnH, you have multiple offices with hundreds of people employed, its difficult to put your self in a position where you would say pay us more or we wont do the work (i.e. turn down all of the work)
However, this is how I do try to do things in general. I always tell my client that if they want a fixed bid, there will be overage no matter what. If they don't like this, they can go else where. One can consider this to be a loss but is it? By not taking this work I may actually be saving more then taking the work and working 3 times more for the same pay.Dmitry Vinnik
Silhouette Images Inc.
ShowReel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxSJlvSwAhA
https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmitry-v...-identity-name
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if only VFX companies could negociate a % cut of takings in addition to their fixed fee
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/f...m-Gravity.html
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Originally posted by peterguthrie View Postwhat a completely messed up industry, had no idea things worked like that, and I thought architecture was bad.
mh
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Originally posted by peterguthrie View Postif only VFX companies could negociate a % cut of takings in addition to their fixed fee
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/f...m-Gravity.htmlLuke Szeflinski
:: www.lukx.com cgi
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It's tough though. You can avoid these problems by not taking jobs that don't give you royalties. But if the studios don't go for it, you close your doors even Earlier because you don't even get the jobs. They'll just hire someone else. There really isn't an easy solution. You can't put too much blame on anyone wanting to maximize profits. Although, if they look at the future of VFX...unless VFX houses do well, they will constantly have to work with someone new. You can save a bit of money by working with the same people since you don't have to waste time with making new relationships.
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