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Agreement for Professional Services

If your company is providing professional services as opposed to selling a product, you may find that you need a good Agreement for Professional Services. This type of agreement lays out the terms and conditions under which your business provides certain services.

Examples of such services

include accounting, engineering, consulting, software development, and property inspections.

Here are the key points to keep in mind when drafting or negotiating an Agreement for Professional Services:

  • Services to be rendered: Clearly set forth the precise services to be rendered in the contract. You want to avoid broad or ambiguous language, such as "Company will provide all services necessary to make the Client's computer operations work quickly and efficiently." This type of language only leads to problems or litigation down the road. Rather, consider language that specifically and narrowly describes what you will be actually doing, such as "Company will provide up to 50 hours of consulting time to assist Client in modifying its computer network to operate more quickly."
  • Fees: Spell out the compensation that you expect to receive and when you expect to receive it. Do you expect an up-front retainer? Do you charge a lump sum for the project or by the hour? When are payments due? Is there a minimum fee required regardless of whether the contract is cancelled early?
  • Reimbursable costs: If you expect the client to reimburse your out-of-pocket expenses or other costs, make sure that your contract specifically states this expectation.
  • Nonsolicitation of employees: You should consider adding a clause that prohibits your customer from soliciting or hiring away your employees who work on the project. This clause is especially important if you have valuable, high-tech employees.

  • Late charges: Use the contract to ensure that if the client doesn't pay your bill on time, interest begins to accrue. Typical late charges accrue at 1 percent to 1½ percent per month on unpaid sums.
  • Liability limitations: Ideally, you want your contract to limit your liability in a number of ways. One typical provision is to say that the maximum amount of your liability exposure is the amount of your fees. (After all, if your risk is greater than your fees, the job may not be worth taking.) You should also consider a clause that states that you are not liable for consequential, punitive, or speculative damages or lost profits. You may also need a clause indemnifying you against liability for harm caused by the client’s failure to perform a needed task or disclose pertinent information. Of course, various laws may limit the enforceability of such provisions, but you generally have little downside in including them in your contract.
  • Period for bringing claims: Another way to potentially limit your liability is to limit the time period when a dissatisfied customer can bring a claim against you. For example, your contract may state that if the customer becomes aware of any problem with the services provided, then the customer has to notify you and bring a legal proceeding within one year of discovering the problem or waive the right to complain. The intention of this clause is to keep someone from bringing a claim against you after your memories about the work have faded.
  • Time to perform services: Be wary of an absolute deadline by which you must complete the services. If you don't complete the work by the deadline, what rights does the customer have? You may be in a disastrous position if you find out that the customer can terminate the contract or withhold paying fees just because of tardiness in finishing a project.
  • Suspension of services: You typically want your contract to say that if you are not paid on time, then you have the right to immediately terminate or suspend performing further services.
  • Force majeure: This legalese clause says that if you are prevented from doing or completing your work by an act of God or unforeseen events (power failure, labor strike, earthquake, and so on), then your inability to perform the work will be excused — at least for a reasonable time.

Click here to view a sample Agreement for Professional Services.

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