About these documents:
These are comprehensive documents which provide for the most common matters that could surface between you and your web writer, graphic designer or coder.
NZ-ECM004 is suitable for either large or more complex sites.
NZ-ECM005 is suitable for smaller sites. It does not contain as much detail as NZ-ECM004.
NZ-ECM006 is suitable for very small sites and, or additional small works to a larger site. It provides the basic essentials to regulate a contract for a specific mini-project, such as an e-mail response system, or a few pages.
Who will use these documents?
These documents have been drafted to protect the client. They can be used by either party but are most suited to any person or Company wanting to allocate website designing work to a professional website designer. If you are for example, the coder or graphic designer, the documents can be amended to give you an advantage, if you so wish.
Key features:
- extensive and comprehensive;
- can be used for any size of web site;
- provide an agenda for meaningful negotiation with your website designer;
- provides for both technical and legal matters;
- provides a complete framework;
- help take the stress out of web site procurement;
- protects your project, your intellectual property and your money.
These documents include provisions for:
- separating the design element if appropriate, so that a separate design contract could be drawn;
- provisions for customer to approve design but pay for additional work if multiple choice required;
- writing of a “Detailed Specification” covering all elements of the work and to be amended on completion to provide the customer with a complete record of the work done;
- a template for the detailed specification;
- regulating customer changes to the specification;
- lists excluded matters for customer's separate attention - e.g. names, hosting; merchant service;
- provides concisely for responsibility for search engine strategy;
- testing and acceptance;
- alternative payment arrangements.
- training option:
- ownership rights over the software created;
- many other legal provisions - warranties, exclusions, indemnities, etc.