You get what you pay for—that’s how the world works. You need to uphold your end of the deal, or people won’t want to work with you anymore. However, some “choosing beggars” seem to believe they’re exempt from this and entitled to free services, as if they deserve everything without paying a dime. Take this individual, for example, who wanted a website and approached a web developer to build one. The twist? This freeloader didn’t pay the developer.
They had agreed on a specific payment amount once the site was complete. But when it was time to pay for the finished project, the client tried to scam the developer. What he didn’t realize, though, was that the developer still controlled the website—meaning the client couldn’t make it go live without him.
Source: Reddit
How can anyone think that is a scam?
Aren’t you the one scamming him? It’s like a pot calling the kettle black.
I’ve heard of hard bargaining but that is basically asking for something for free.
I’ve never had to handle a commission before in my life, so forgive me for asking this.
But how do you not see signs of this stuff coming? Is there little to no interaction before hand? I feel like most these beggers mentality would prominently display itself before hand.
Again, never dealt with these kinds of people personally. So I apologize if the question comes off rude. –ChaosInClarity
They didn’t agree with that beforehand did they?
In all seriousness I’m quite upset about this. Never using the website I found this client on again.
EDIT: To answer everyone asking why I charged him such a low flat rate, it’s because it was an extremely simple website. To give you an idea, instead of asking me to implement cart and checkout, he just asked me to put his discord name on the page and instructions on how to add him to purchase. Stuff like that. It would have been even cheaper if he didn’t keep changing his mind about everything. –TimmyTurner3432
You don’t have $650 but have enough to hire a lawyer?
Why do I feel like he is going to scam the lawyer as well and ‘call it’ $80 after the case has been thrown out?
This is a lesson. Always demand payment up front. If someone isn’t willing to pay you in advance for your work, or at least in stages with milestones if it’s a big project, they aren’t worth your time.
Yes, sometimes a potential client who refuses to pay up front would have paid you, but MOST of the time the result will be shit like this. It’s not worth the headaches, not worth the hassles, to deal with this shit and put up with drama like this, and you’ll end up wasting a ton of time and effort.
The solution is to just not start work until you get paid.
As a lawyer I constantly dealt with non-paying clients, and I hated it so much. The only clients who ever paid me were actually people with high credit scores, go figure. So I learned pretty quick that if you agree to work for someone without up front payment, you’re almost guaranteed to get fucked, and even if you do an amazing job and you win their case, they will usually still not pay you, because there is no urgency, no need. You’re simply too far down their list of priorities. That’s just how a lot of people are. –dekachin5