No good deed ever goes unpunished.  I have had such punishments in the past.
But thus far, with the folks I do pro bono work for currently it seems all
has been going very nicely.  I have not been abused by any of them.


Gil

> -----Original Message-----
> From: profoxtech-boun...@leafe.com
> [mailto:profoxtech-boun...@leafe.com]on Behalf Of Ken Kixmoeller/fh
> Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 12:50 PM
> To: profoxt...@leafe.com
> Subject: Re: [NF] Do you do pro bono work?
>
>
>
> On Feb 10, 2009, at 9:11 AM, Stephen Russell wrote:
>
> > Here is blog on one guys thoughts on the matter.
> >
> > <http://boagworld.com/personal/never_work_for_free/>
>
> I agree with him. Even charitable organizations need to make cost/
> benefit decisions, otherwise they want "everything" even if it
> doesn't make sense to do.
>
> One time, I did work for a (not close) friend as a barter.
> Unfortunately, we each valued our own service more than the other
> person valued it. If one does this, one must set up the *specific*
> value of the goods being bartered beforehand.
>
> I don't do anything for friends any more, either. Not too long ago, a
> very successful friend bought a business for his son (first red flag
> I should have caught). The business was in a different industry from
> the one in which he had had so much success (second red flag). It had
> a loyalty program in place, and the friend didn't have experience
> with that. I did, so he brought me in as a consultant for that. Not
> technical consulting, but marketing: the structure of the customer
> loyalty program. After studying the situation, I made some
> recommendations. He didn't like my ideas (third r-f). I also told him
> that the businesses off-the-shelf management package was not capable
> of running the loyalty program he had in mind, and researched and
> presented packages that would. He didn't want to change. (Fourth Flag)
>
> In a normal (not friend) situation, I would have said "thank you so
> much, but I think you need a different consultant, as we seem to
> approach these issues differently." (Thinking: "you need someone who
> will suck your, er, agree with all of your half-assed ideas.")
> Because he was a friend, I didn't, and carried on, even trying to
> write a program to kludge his off-the-shelf program to do what he
> wanted.
>
> Longer story than this, but the end result was pretty nasty on all ends.
>
> Never again.
>
> Ken
>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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