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Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

Milestone on a fixed price contract

Hi guys! Kinda new here on upwork and got hired for a project with a budget of 250$. The project is to complete 12vids including some research before the edit. The offer says first milestone funded (Video Project I = 12 videos + Research      amount:100$) meaning there is already 100$ in escrow.

 

My question is do i get the remaining balance from the client's budget after completing everything? The first milestone is basically the final output for the offer. So i dont understand why it should be cut to milestones.

Should i put another milestone that says Completion = amount150$ (which is the remaining balance to be earned)

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Jennifer's avatar
Jennifer M Community Member

ooof wow those messages. Yep, like I said this already is looking like no bueno.

 

No need to ask him to fund another milestone. He can't anyway. The time to ask for full escrow is before you accept. He expects you to do it all too on half I reckon from those message.

 

That client is a ray of friggin sunshine.

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Virginia's avatar
Virginia F Community Member


Cedree W wrote:

Hi guys! Kinda new here on upwork and got hired for a project with a budget of 250$. The project is to complete 12vids including some research before the edit. The offer says first milestone funded (Video Project I = 12 videos + Research      amount:100$) meaning there is already 100$ in escrow.

 

My question is do i get the remaining balance from the client's budget after completing everything? The first milestone is basically the final output for the offer. So i dont understand why it should be cut to milestones.

Should i put another milestone that says Completion = amount150$ (which is the remaining balance to be earned)


For a budget that low, it's really best to only use one milestone, and do not start work until the milestone is fully-funded. Right now, all your client is responsible for is what is in escrow ... $100.

 

Did you set up milestones when you bid on the job?

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

no i did not set milestones when i made the bid. he added that himself. and since i saw that it was 250$ was written on the contract I accepted the offer, thinking the remaining amount will be awarded to me upon completion of the contract. Here is what the client has to say:

Virginia's avatar
Virginia F Community Member


Cedree W wrote:

no i did not set milestones when i made the bid. he added that himself. and since i saw that it was 250$ was written on the contract I accepted the offer, thinking the remaining amount will be awarded to me upon completion of the contract. Here is what the client has to say:


And this is why experienced freelancers (and mods) suggest that you read all the many help articles before you start working. Had you done that, this situation would not be occurring. Even if you don't want to read everything, at the very least, the basics of milestones and getting paid should be on your list of things to learn and understand before taking any more jobs.

 

The client is rightfully upset. You might want to consider a polite explanation as to why you made your request, and maybe they'll understand.

 

ETA: There's nothing wrong with asking for one fully-funded milestone, but since you didn't because you thought wrong about how milestones work, I can understand the client's point of view. You agreed to their terms.

 

Full escrow does not have to be fully funded - milestones are between you and your clients and how you set your bids and jobs up from the start.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

I apologized and explained to him that from what i read here, the full escrow must be funded. And the first milestone is kind of the the general output of the job but with only partial amount funded. And then he said:
We have already awarded you the job so DO NOT ask for any request. We always pay when the job is done. It's almost like an insult.
Virginia's avatar
Virginia F Community Member


Cedree W wrote:
I apologized and explained to him that from what i read here, the full escrow must be funded. And the first milestone is kind of the the general output of the job but with only partial amount funded. And then he said:
We have already awarded you the job so DO NOT ask for any request. We always pay when the job is done. It's almost like an insult.

No one told you full escrow must be funded ... it doesn't.

 

What I suggested is that it doesn't make sense for jobs with low budgets to have any more than one milestone. If this client has spent a lot of money and worked with other freelancers, they know perfectly well how things work.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

on a client's pov, are they require to set a certain milestone for creating a contract? or can they fund full without the milestone? it obviously wrong that we set a milestone for the full output with partial amount. and it sucks that i accepted it without being fully informed

Prateek's avatar
Prateek S Community Member

Hi Cedree,
As far as I know, you should not start working until the client puts a complete amount in the escrow. It is highly possible that the client later denies paying the complete amount and in that case, Upwork won't be able to protect you. 
Make it clear to the client that, you won't start working until that or change first milestone to whatever you feel is worth $100 instead of the final output.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

Thank you for all your replies. This is what the client said after sending a request for the remaining amount.

Phyllis's avatar
Phyllis G Community Member

Follow the advice you received from Virginia and Prateek. Never do more work than can be paid for with funds in escrow. The client needs to either place the remaining funds in escrow for the milestone, or re-write the milestone terms to reflect only $100 worth of work (about 8 videos?).

Good luck!

Preston's avatar
Preston H Community Member

Remember that Upwork will never look at the "budget."

 

Upwork will only look at the amount funded in escrow.

 

So if there was a problem, and you complained: I was not paid in full...

 

Upwork would ask: "How much was in escrow?"

 

Freelancer: $100

 

Upwork: "How much were you paid?"

 

Freelancer: $100

 

Upwork: "You have been paid on full. Case closed."

Jennifer's avatar
Jennifer M Community Member

This is already looking like no bueno.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

thats what im thinking too. the client was definitely pissed. do i just cancel the contract? im afraid he would leave bad feedback and/or it would affect my JSS 😞

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

kind of wrong move on my part that i accepted the offer because i thought since the full budget is on the contract it will automatically be paid on my balance once the contract ended. 

Preston's avatar
Preston H Community Member

re: "the client was definitely pissed."

 

Why?

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

this what he said

Jennifer's avatar
Jennifer M Community Member

ooof wow those messages. Yep, like I said this already is looking like no bueno.

 

No need to ask him to fund another milestone. He can't anyway. The time to ask for full escrow is before you accept. He expects you to do it all too on half I reckon from those message.

 

That client is a ray of friggin sunshine.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

Yeah i thought so too! And i dont want to continue. Will he give me public feedback when i cancel the contract?
Jennifer's avatar
Jennifer M Community Member


Cedree W wrote:
Yeah i thought so too! And i dont want to continue. Will he give me public feedback when i cancel the contract?

Has he really spent $200k in a year? You can also look at his feedback to see if he pays out and also to see if he pays what he says he does.

 

idk, dude, this is your call but there is a chance you're not getting paid. But we can't see the client profile so can't make a call on something like that. After you click accept, the contract affects your JSS.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

Yes he reallly did 200k+ total spent and member since 2008. He prebably took my request the wrong way and then lashed out on me
Jennifer's avatar
Jennifer M Community Member


Cedree W wrote:
Yes he reallly did 200k+ total spent and member since 2008. He prebably took my request the wrong way and then lashed out on me

I'm sure there are some **Edited for Community Guidelines** out there, but usually a client that has spent $200k in a year doesn't act like that. I have doubts that amount was in a year. $200k in 12 years though ain't really that much. You would be able to identify if he's lying by looking at his history. 

 

But anyway, I can't tell you what I would do because I have the perk and can **Edited for Community Guidelines** with these people without consequences. You've got your JSS to think of, but just know that I'm sure he's escrowing half because if he doesn't like your work, he will try to get out of paying.

Cedree's avatar
Cedree W Community Member

thank you! i checked my jss and apparently its still not available since i only have done few. what about public feedback? will he have an optio to write me one? im really having bad vibes for this one, and i dont want to continue having this kind of moment with the client. 😞

Preston's avatar
Preston H Community Member

re: "$200k in 12 years though ain't really that much"

 

$200k in 12 years, or in a single year.... Either way, that is the mark of a serious client and not a scammer.

 

And that is more money than most freelancers have spent on Upwork, as well as more money than most clients have spent on Upwork.

 

$16,666 per year is not a particularly large amount for a successful U.S. business.

So I agree with Jennifer's sentiment that if this was over a period of 10 years... This doesn't mean the client represents considerable wealth or a company that is spending tons of money on Upwork.

 

But it IS more money than most Upwork users have spent.

Jennifer's avatar
Jennifer M Community Member


Preston H wrote:

re: "$200k in 12 years though ain't really that much"

 

$200k in 12 years, or in a single year.... Either way, that is the mark of a serious client and not a scammer.

 

And that is more money than most freelancers have spent on Upwork, as well as more money than most clients have spent on Upwork.

 

$16,666 per year is not a particularly large amount for a successful U.S. business.

So I agree with Jennifer's sentiment that if this was over a period of 10 years... This doesn't mean the client represents considerable wealth or a company that is spending tons of money on Upwork.

 

But it IS more money than most Upwork users have spent.


I never said the client was a scammer, but it's entirely possible he plans to not pay this guy if he doesn't like the work. That's the whole reason for only escrowing half.

 

From his messages, he expects him to do all the work too and then trust that he'll pay. What happens if tomorrow the client gets hit by a bus? The freelancer needs to protect his own interest and get it fully funded for the work he'll be doing.

 

Personally, I'd do half if he spoke to me like that and then tell him to pay me. He'd argue, and then I'd take it to mediation just to be a

**Edited for Community Guidelines**

about it.

Preston's avatar
Preston H Community Member

re: "The freelancer needs to protect his own interest and get it fully funded for the work he'll be doing."

 

The client may be out of line.

 

But it looks like you and I both agree that the freelancer set up the contract improperly.