I've been consulting for the past 12 years myself, and I usually just go
to the company being sure they have a clear picture of my hourly rate.
 I do the job, leave, and send them a bill.  I've found companies very
willing to pay because they know that the IT community is a "small
world," and if they want service again, they don't mess with the
consultants.

The only times I've found contracts necessary were when a) you draw up
retainers (agreements to provide some amount of service over a certain
period of time or to be "on call" with them), or b) when you do work for
the government, but the government's easy since they usually present you
with a contract that you read and sign (or read and walk away).

Have fun with it!

Garrett

Erik Anderson wrote:
> So I have just gotten asked to do my first freelance consulting gig.
> I'll be setting up an Apache/Tomcat environment for a company, but
> that's beside the point.
>
> I figure that there are at least a few people on the list that have
> done private consulting before, and I'd like to ask for advice, as I'm
> pretty ignorant to the whole process.
>
> I know that they'll just cut me a check, and I'll have to declare that
> income on next year's tax return.
>
> Do I need to write up a contract beforehand?
> Is there any legalities that I need to be careful of?
> Should I get a partial payment before starting?
> etc., etc., etc.
>
> There's a thousand more questions I could ask, but I guess I'll start
> with these.
>
> Thanks in advance!
> -Erik Anderson
>
>
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