We've talked about contracts, professionalism, and design methods in this forum, well here's a horror story containing all three. A Manuafactoring company in this area (N. Carolina)is a very big supporter of the local community. Chamber of Commerce, Civic clubs, etc., and has a strong policy to always buy locally if possible. They recently were looking to purchase screen printed T-Shirts & sweat shirts for employees. This turned out to be a $50,000.00+ purchase. (Over 1500 employees)
Being a "High - Tech" company they hit the WWW to find a vendor and gather bids. They actually found a "local" company that did screen printing and had a web site, so they purchasing agent typed in the URL and arrived at the site. The opening page text stated the company had a large variety and could supply most needs. The opening page also invited visitors to "come in" and browse their offerings. Only problem - there was no navigation, none, no buttons, no text links nothing! So the purchasing agent continued his quest and placed an order with another company (still in NC, but across the state). Seems the manufactoring company uses a firewal to strip all Java, JavaScript and any non ASCII files from the HTTP headers of any web sites accessed from the corporate network (BTW, this is not at all unusual).
End of story? Nope! It seems the owner of the screen printing company and a member of the board of the manufactoring company met and the screen printing company owner inquired about why they bought their shirts from some one else. Now the whole story came out and the screen printing company is suing the web designer, because his contract states the web site "... will accessable to the global market place."
No telling how this will turn out, but thought you all would find it interesting to say the least....
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Gil Harvey
"No one is listening until you make a mistake"
Old Hippy Productions, Inc.
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