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dezinerite 05-02-2008 09:21 PM

Originally Posted by -Nick-
Plus I didn't understood the looks part..... Where you said me an my friend has looks..... I thought for a good website we don't need good looks or a great body. It is all a mind game.



LOL yeah, what was that about? Haha...I didn't get that one. :D

DylanButler 05-03-2008 10:32 AM

Originally Posted by seriousbizz
Hello.

...Be ready with answers or at least with contacts you are familiar with to guide you through that process.



Hi,

Thanks for the essay on beginning web development :). Some great info to take from this, most importantly to do your homework and know what questions to ask going in.

It seems like most of you advise to keep work at home. Unless business is doing really well, it will probably stay that way aside from a few client training sessions and pitch meetings.

Originally Posted by Janga
Sounds great but how would you get passed the language barrier, and why wouldn't your clients just get someone local to them in?



It's a good question. Obviously it would have to be worth it for us to learn a new language, so we'd probably seek companies with English speaking associates to make things easier. Alternatively, perhaps there is a company or third-party that is seeking someone to work with another American company's developers. There are several situations that lend themselves to this type of scenario. The important thing here is the dynamics of this industry lend us the option of working from anywhere, and we want to maximize that opportunity.

Originally Posted by Dezinerite
Originally Posted by -Nick-
Plus I didn't understood the looks part..... Where you said me an my friend has looks..... I thought for a good website we don't need good looks or a great body. It is all a mind game.

LOL yeah, what was that about? Haha...I didn't get that one.



You won't be landing many clients from behind a monitor..

Thanks for the advice guys.

BY THE WAY.. we decided on a business name.

Coming soon: EXAMP creative agency

Cicero 05-03-2008 11:30 PM

Dylan, I have some advice.. a bit legal, rest is financial.

If you are really REALLY serious about this, I suggest you establish a partnership wud cost u less that 1000 $.

Next, you overheads will be very low.. The company exists mainly only in name.

Next you will have to send letters ( on your company's printed paper or something ) to the general manager or MD to upcoming companies that can afford to hire you but dosnt have a site still.

And you MUST have a competitive pricing .. astonishing portfolio. There is a lot of potential in education and law fields. There are many good small group of advocates looking for a site.

Sadly however.. if you have profit in mind, I advice you not to physically go globe trotting.. unless payed by company. It would be much MORE profitable to stay in your place.. with low overheads ( litrally none).

If you find my advice good, please consider Repping me ++.

Serious Bidzz has given great points you have to consider before you form the partnership.

DylanButler 05-08-2008 09:16 AM

great advice, just what I'm looking for!

And regarding our priorities, travel and establishing quality relationships are our main concerns at the moment. We actually expect to lose money at first.

-Nick- 05-08-2008 09:35 AM

Well nothing wrong in it. But I will put my tip in it.

Charge 2.5 times more then the costs that you are gonna incur because the customer support is really a mess. Believe me. I have developed more then 1000 sites but the most painful part was the support part. When they cannot know how to hold a mouse move the cursor and then click on the "Click me" button.

Thanks.

DylanButler 05-10-2008 12:49 PM

Originally Posted by -Nick-
Well nothing wrong in it. But I will put my tip in it.

Charge 2.5 times more then the costs that you are gonna incur because the customer support is really a mess. Believe me. I have developed more then 1000 sites but the most painful part was the support part. When they cannot know how to hold a mouse move the cursor and then click on the "Click me" button.

Thanks.



That had me laughing out loud. :yell:

Thanks for your input. Luckily I have not experienced much of this. However, my work deals with many overseas clients (lots of Japanese and Spanish) and I gotta tell you, some of their directions can be less than understandable. And for some reason lots of them forget what features we've sold them.

You bring up a good point about the support being mission critical. Ongoing maintenance is key and while providing these clients the ability to manage content themselves, we are going to welcome any incoming work and "upsell" as much as possible. The maintenance department at my current work brings in a large chunk of our company's income, so we are going to try to recognize this fact and plan accordingly.

seriousbizz 09-06-2008 11:54 PM

Hi DylanButler.

Any updates as to what you decided to do and how's it going?

DylanButler 09-14-2008 07:48 PM

Originally Posted by seriousbizz
Hi DylanButler.

Any updates as to what you decided to do and how's it going?



Hi Seriousbizz,

My associate and I are still in the works of forming our partnership.

We have decided on the company name, EXAMP.

We are in the process of finishing up our individual portfolios, straightening out our graduation, and then getting this business off the ground.

I will keep you all posted as things roll out.

P.S., check out the newly launched www.dylanbutler.com !

miajade11 10-01-2008 02:52 AM

hi guys, i am miajade. thanks for these great posts.


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