How a Design Business Hired a Lawyer to Draft a Graphic Design Agreement in Florida
See real project results from ContractsCounsel's legal marketplace — this project was posted by a Design business in Florida seeking help to draft a Graphic Design Agreement. The client received 7 lawyer proposals with flat fee bids ranging from $300 to $1,500.
Draft
Graphic Design Agreement
Florida
Business
Design
Less than a week
$300 - $1,500 (Flat fee)
7 bids
How much does it cost to Draft a Graphic Design Agreement in Florida?
For this project, the client received 7 proposals from lawyers to draft a Graphic Design Agreement in Florida, with flat fee bids ranging from $300 to $1,500 on a flat fee. Pricing may vary based on the complexity of the legal terms, the type of service requested, and the required turnaround time.Project Description
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Lawyers that Bid on this Graphic Design Agreement Project
Principal
7 years practicing
Free consultation
Managing Partner
7 years practicing
Free consultation
Partner/Attorney at Law
18 years practicing
Free consultation
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Other Lawyers that Help with Graphic Design Agreement Projects
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Graphic Design Agreement
Florida
Is it necessary to have a written Graphic Design Agreement for freelance projects?
I am a freelance graphic designer who often takes on various projects for clients. While I have typically relied on verbal agreements or informal emails to outline the project scope, deliverables, and payment terms, I recently had a negative experience where a client disputed our agreed-upon terms. This incident made me wonder if it is essential to have a written Graphic Design Agreement in place to protect both parties' rights and ensure clear communication and expectations from the beginning of a project.
Ralph S.
It is highly recommended, but it is not necessary (ie required by law) to have a written agreement in most circumstances. But, as in with any handshake agreement- it will hard to figure out if there's a misunderstanding or something goes wrong. You end up in court, having people give testimony about what was and what wasn't the deal, and you're asking the judge/jury to go through your emails to try to get an understanding. Not to mention, an agreement can force things like mediation and arbitration to makes things easy. Also, without a writing you can both be wrong about your understanding of what the deal was, nobody being at blame. Litigating is never simple or easy or fast. Unless it's in small claims. Making it easy on yourself or your future lawyer can help you avoid a lot of future headache.
Graphic Design Agreement
California
Is it necessary to have a written agreement for a graphic design project?
I am a freelance graphic designer and recently I had a client who requested a logo design for their business. We discussed the project details verbally, but I didn't have a written agreement in place. Now that the project is complete, the client is refusing to pay and claiming they are not satisfied with the final design. I'm wondering if having a written agreement in place would have protected me in this situation and if it is necessary for future graphic design projects to avoid similar disputes.
Dawn K.
I always recommend a signed agreement that covers the basics of "Q-TIPS"- this is for educational purposes only, by the way. The 1. Quantity 1 logo- plus, I would add the number of revisions under the agreement, because creative work often needs tweaks and you will be unprofitable when there are hours involved in 6 revisions when you only said 2. Time of Performance- 2 weeks? a month? 6 months? when will the project be done? When will payment be due? 3. Identity of the parties (pretty self-explanatory)4. Price (not your estimate, a contracted price) and 5. Subject matter. Not "logo" but an actual description with the colors, fonts, ideas. Finally, I would encourage project management software, like Trello, or Monday, or Asana, or whatever to track the phases of the project and the critical places the client must sign off on the design or document carefully the requests for revision. In a creative space, like graphic design, the final like or dislike can be subjective. You were hired to create a brand and an identity into a logo- and you didn't get paid. Based on the agreement, this is potentially small claims to enforce a verbal agreement.