@enqueue_russ @blondishnet @askwpgirl @WP101 Yeah, I’m for sure not talking about addendums. At the end of the day having to fall back on a contract and start getting into legal garbage is the last thing I want to do.
@blondishnet @enqueue_russ @askwpgirl I think the key to realize is that this is all about the exception than the rule. Even some of the most frustrating clients I’ve been able to work things out and and build trust and respect.
@blondishnet @enqueue_russ @askwpgirl @WP101 Right this is the sort of trust and communication I was talking about needing between you and the client. Odd that it seemed you were originally asking why this would even be in a contract.
@enqueue_russ @blondishnet @askwpgirl The “stupid tax” and explicit contract is for protection from the client-zilla and sue-happy world we live in.
@blondishnet @enqueue_russ @askwpgirl Yeah, I would say most clients are good, but there are those that do act like children. I would say that it’s all about the relationship and building trust with the client really. You can take a locked down approach if they trust you to manage it that way.
@redcrew @abrightclearweb YES! This exactly. I think what seems to be the challenge with Premium Themes & Plugins is that there is no official method for these to be handled with WordPress so it’s a challenge to deal with all the different ways developers have devised to handle updates/licensing.
RT @edwin_b24: Hi, guys. I’m currently looking for a job in Web Development (ideally Front-End but I have Full Stack experience too). If yo…
@schutzsmith @askwpgirl We do this for the most part as a standard with our client sites. Essentially we’re providing fully managed WP hosted sites.
@DaisyOlsen I’ve got a Dell XPS 13 and Linux runs excellent on it. It’s got USB-C charging and a tiny power brick as well. I’d look into @system76 first though.