you don't have to study law but you have to be informed. its no fun getting ripped off.
me too but I wish I did for 1 job. a well known real estate developer from out of state asked me to be on their staff and do work for them. they were renovating a large mill complex, and needed someone with my experience. I had been doing photo stuff for nearly 20 years professionally and thought I would be OK ( and they came highly recommended by people I had worked with years before too) ... but .. I know better now. should have had a mechanic's lien put on them. turns out I found out years later I wasn't alone, they ripped off 100s of local people ( some put mechanics liens on them and eventually got paid, they had a lawyer help them out .. ) ... hindsight is 20 20.
I’m glad they know what photography is because philosophers have been trying to figure out what it is for at least five or six decades…and photography doesn’t know what it is either…
I guess performing arts because it is recording something and there are releases involved ?
When I was first getting started in business, I had a problem with a real estate developer in Manhattan who clipped me for $3500. My instinct when I met him the first time was negative. He seemed flaky. But I was too interested in getting his building to service its fire alarm system, a 60 story high rise office building on Park Avenue South. So I ignored my intuition and proceeded to do work for him. Big mistake, but lesson learned. I didn't file a mechanics lien. I was new at the time and didn't want to get a reputation with other real estate companies and people I might be doing business with as I developed my company. Despite being so big, the Manhattan office building real estate industry is actually pretty small. There are only so many players. But I learned a lesson and worked only with those developers, owners, and management companies I learned I could trust. I had one building, the American Bible Society that owned a building on Broadway, that I sent a substantial proposal for additional work he needed to be done. Two weeks later, he called me asking why I had;t sent him the first invoice for 1/3 of the total amount I asked for in my proposal, even before starting any work. I hand't even sent an invoice. He was calling me! With customers like that, I didn't need a lawyer.
I got to the point where I had been servicing the fire alarm systems in many Manhattahigh-rise office buildings for twenty years and getting paid the monthly service charge, with direct bank transfers. I didn't even have to invoice them so established were my relations. Even when buildings and management companies changed hands, I was able to transfer the auto payments. The only notification I sent them was an annual increase based on CPI. They would adjust their computers with the new amount and the direct payments would continue at the higher rate. Boy was that sweet. In effect, there really was no proposal or signed contract. So no need for a lawyer to read the fine print. There wasn't any. All done on trust for twenty years.
There were contractors that didn't pay me. But I never filed a lien going after them through the NYC COmportrollers OFfice if it was government work. Or if I was a sub to them in one of my commercial service buildings where new tenant work was being done, I would pressure them for payment using the building owner. I would never file a lien in that case. After all, I was the building owner's inside contractor and had their protection.