Apr 27, 2021 02:46:09 AM by Mohand Amokrane O
Hello dears,
Hope you're doing all well.
I have a client with a contract budgeted with 250 $ but the client deposited only 50 $ in escrow, do I have to worry? I am new to Upwork and I don't know if this is common practice or no?
Can you please advise me of how to proceed and deal with the client, he assured me that he will pay, but I am afraid that he may not be totally honest, I saw some of the feedback from his past contract where they say that he is no totally honest (not all the jobs).
I completed the work and I am ready to submit my work by 29-04-2021.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Apr 27, 2021 03:02:25 AM by Mikko R
Mohand, when we have a fixed price contract, nothing else about the money really matters than what is in the escrow. When you use the Submit Work button, the client has 14 days to review the work, and if the client vanished, the money comes to you. Whatever is mentioned in the original budget does not matter one bit. Only what is paid into the escrow.
If you have already done and sent work worth more than what is in the escrow, there is no protection mechanism in place that would make the client pay, as there is no contract of anything else than that $50.
Discuss with the client, be super nice and supportive, and perhaps the client actually pays up.
Right now, you should only submit the part that you have promised for the $50, let the client approve it, release the money, and pay the remaining $200 into the escrow, and then only you go about the remaining parts of the work (but sounds like you already did it and the time is spent).
You can also see if the client wants to split the remaining $200 into smaller milestones of e.g. another $50 so he would be more comfortable in paying more.
Next time, surely, you shall only work on funded milestones.
Look at the bright side, even in the worst case you only lost a little time. But you learned a lot!
Hope this helps. Cheers! 👍
Apr 27, 2021 03:02:25 AM by Mikko R
Mohand, when we have a fixed price contract, nothing else about the money really matters than what is in the escrow. When you use the Submit Work button, the client has 14 days to review the work, and if the client vanished, the money comes to you. Whatever is mentioned in the original budget does not matter one bit. Only what is paid into the escrow.
If you have already done and sent work worth more than what is in the escrow, there is no protection mechanism in place that would make the client pay, as there is no contract of anything else than that $50.
Discuss with the client, be super nice and supportive, and perhaps the client actually pays up.
Right now, you should only submit the part that you have promised for the $50, let the client approve it, release the money, and pay the remaining $200 into the escrow, and then only you go about the remaining parts of the work (but sounds like you already did it and the time is spent).
You can also see if the client wants to split the remaining $200 into smaller milestones of e.g. another $50 so he would be more comfortable in paying more.
Next time, surely, you shall only work on funded milestones.
Look at the bright side, even in the worst case you only lost a little time. But you learned a lot!
Hope this helps. Cheers! 👍
Apr 27, 2021 03:07:45 AM by Mohand Amokrane O
Hello Mikko,
Thank you so much for your clarification.
This is a newbies mistake, I'll learn from it.
Best Regards,
Apr 27, 2021 05:58:59 PM by Abinadab A
Mikko R wrote:Mohand, when we have a fixed price contract, nothing else about the money really matters than what is in the escrow. When you use the Submit Work button, the client has 14 days to review the work, and if the client vanished, the money comes to you. Whatever is mentioned in the original budget does not matter one bit. Only what is paid into the escrow.
If you have already done and sent work worth more than what is in the escrow, there is no protection mechanism in place that would make the client pay, as there is no contract of anything else than that $50.
Discuss with the client, be super nice and supportive, and perhaps the client actually pays up.
Right now, you should only submit the part that you have promised for the $50, let the client approve it, release the money, and pay the remaining $200 into the escrow, and then only you go about the remaining parts of the work (but sounds like you already did it and the time is spent).
You can also see if the client wants to split the remaining $200 into smaller milestones of e.g. another $50 so he would be more comfortable in paying more.
Next time, surely, you shall only work on funded milestones.
Look at the bright side, even in the worst case you only lost a little time. But you learned a lot!
Hope this helps. Cheers! 👍
Terrific to see folks tryna help but maybe boil down your subsequent advice a bit?
Petra just said the same thing in 2 sentences and it was waaaay more digestible 😉
Apr 27, 2021 03:06:15 AM by Petra R
Mohand Amokrane O wrote:I have a client with a contract budgeted with 250 $ but the client deposited only 50 $ in escrow,
Can you please advise me of how to proceed
Only give the client $50 worth of the work.
Do *NOT* submit $250, as you would have no recourse if the client doesn't pay more than $50.
Apr 27, 2021 03:15:21 AM by Mohand Amokrane O
Hello Petra,
I just send one file and ask for this payment, I proposed to the client a new milestone for each file.
Best regards
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