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PHP Programming Technology

Attitudes in IT - Mediocrity Wins? 145

podo asks: "I've spent the past two months of my life working almost full time on a PHP/MySQL based web site for a client. Today I received an e-mail from the client point me to a similar web site set up by a competitor. 'Doing exactly what we are doing.' The site in question is not doing what we are doing, they have no dynamic content, no web forms, just e-mail addresses. They scarcely have any content (I counted only four HTML pages) at all. The client is chastising me for taking a long time and because the other site is 'much more impressive visually' than ours. Has anyone else found themselves in a situation where their painstaking work is compared to work which is a showcase for mediocrity? How have you dealt with such clients who fail to see the difference between a shoddy rush job and real quality?"
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Attitudes in IT - Mediocrity Wins?

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  • Yes. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pb ( 1020 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:46PM (#9261102)
    It's called The New Jersey Approach [jwz.org].
    • Detailed System Requirements.

      Otherwise, you cannot under-promise and over-deliver... ;-)

      • Detailed System Requirements.

        Worthless when you're dealing with websites for people who don't know about websites. People who have never had a site and are in the market for one, are looking for the "oh...neat" factor provided by graphics, not performance. They usually want cool looks and don't care much about the backend workings. It should work, but more, it should look impressive. So, the key for code monkeys is to work together with a graphic artist or the like. That way, you can just code and n
  • by prostoalex ( 308614 ) * on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:49PM (#9261119) Homepage Journal
    The site in question is not doing what we are doing, they have no dynamic content, no web forms, just e-mail addresses.

    Yes, but was that in the specs? Or was that something you voluntarily done for your client? If the client's requirement was "a simple Web site showcasing our products and allowing people to contact us", then he's right in pointing out that some things can be done cheaper and faster. You might have implemented scalable multi-processor algorithms for error-checking the text in the Web form, what does he care?

    • That is right, LIVE BY THE REQUIREMENTS. That way when something like this comes up, you can point to their requirement and say, "That is what you wanted." Marketers are the worst at wanting everthing, then complaining about the time or changing their minds. My experience is that marketing is what is driving websites so you have to protect youself.

      KevG
      • >> LIVE BY THE REQUIREMENTS.

        Absolutely. But it is your responsibility to make sure the client understands what will be delivered when you meet the requirements. Part of your job is translating requirements-speak into client-speak.

        After being burned (as the client) I learned to schedule a session whose only purpose is to have the client outline for the designers what he thinks the requirements mean. Tends to clear up a lot of confusion before the real work begins.
        • hmm. maybe that should be someone else's job. this other person could take the specifications from the customer to the engineers, and then from the engineers to the customer.

          wouldn't that make everything easier?
          • Sure, if you've got the person. Whoever it is, they need to be conversant with both the client's business and the design business.

            I've sat in more than enough unhappy meetings between client and software firms for this lifetime. Far too often, the customer is ticked off because they didn't get what they thought they asked for. When the techies respond, "That's the requirements said.", I know that they sent someone over to the client's office for half-a-day to ask questions and write requirements. The spe

    • Yes, but was that in the specs? Or was that something you voluntarily done for your client?

      I consider myself a pretty good programmer, taking pains to write quality code, that is extensible, powerful, flexible, elegent, etc. It is anathema for me to do a shoddy job.

      But some years ago I had a wise boss who told me

      not to deliver a Cadillac to the customer when a Volkswagen will do.
  • by andawyr ( 212118 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:49PM (#9261127)
    Keep in mind that clients rarely know what they want until they seem something tangible, be it something you develop for them, or something they see.

    Regardless, satisfying a client without a very detailed spec (which they sign off on) is a very difficult thing. It's never good enough, or is never matches their conception of what they were looking for.

    Always, always, always, have a spec document that details exactly what they're getting for their $$$. Then, when they bitch and moan about what you gave them, point at the document. It's not a fail-safe way to do business, but it will help you not get sued. It also helps prevent scope creep, which if allowed will impact *your* bottom line, not theirs.

    • clients rarely know what they want...
      satisfying a client ... is a very difficult thing.
      Then, when they bitch and moan...
      ...will impact *your* bottom line, not theirs.

      So if I understand corretly, and correct me if I'm wrong, dealing with a client is alot like dealing with my wife?
  • by torpor ( 458 ) <ibisum AT gmail DOT com> on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:51PM (#9261137) Homepage Journal

    In my opinion, this points to a decided lack of a proper design phase in you development process.

    Does the client really not know enough about the design of what you are building for them, that they have made such an 'obvious' mis-comparison with the other project?

    Design is more than just 'its going to work this way', its also 'its going to work this way, because' ...
    • Design is more than just 'its going to work this way', its also 'its going to work this way, because' ...

      Yes, exactly. No matter how smart you are, you must be able to prove your smartness to critics or else it's not worth anything.

  • by Kobal ( 597997 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:52PM (#9261157)
    I think you missed a word: visually. A good layout and visuals are not about coding and they require a totally different set of skills.
    Only a plumber would care mostly about plumbing when buying a house. Most people will first judge on how it looks and how they feel it would be like to live in it.
    • Not only a plumber would care a lot about plumbing when buying a house, but anyone whose home has been flooded and their property damaged.

      The "blame" lies somewhere in the middle here.

      Home buyers who don't care about the quality of the plumbing are just asking to learn the hard way.
      People who want a website but want it quick (and without any maintenance system behind the scenes) are asking for trouble later when they can't keep it updated.
      • But websites are funny. Half the time the client will either loose interest - not care the same four static HTML pages are there day after day-, or completely replace the whole thing with a twelve year old's creation, or simply go bankrupt.

        That's the thing - it's usually not worth the effort making mantainable websites because the odds are the website author won't end up maintaining them anyway.
    • The analogy isn't all that good (bad plumbing will usually cause really nasty problems later on; a lower spec web site will just cause frustration), but the sentiment is spot on.

      The web team at our office consists of two people. A developer, who writes the code, and a graphic designer, who makes it look pretty to the customer.

      Customers only see (and often only really care about) the user interface. If the software is insecure, inadequate, screws up their data, or whatever else, they truly don't seem to ca
  • Could it be that your client is right? I mean, if your pages have a beautiful back end, but a front end that looks like processed yak's droppings, isn't there a good chance that a prospective customer will go for the more 'professional' website?

    You might have an amazing database engine, but if it is not visually appealing, there is still a major issue.

    To sum up: Customers like shiny things. Make it pretty.
    • ... and make sure all the icons are Corn-flower blue.
    • by elmegil ( 12001 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:09PM (#9261304) Homepage Journal
      I think the point is similar to yours, but different. It's not about LOOKS. It's about what the client wants to ACCOMPLISH. What is the TASK that the website is intended to do?

      Your design may be prettier, more effective, etc. but if the end result achieved is only slightly different than the competition, and you took 4 times as long to get there, it should be clear which site the client is going to prefer.

      You need to step back from your work long enough to evaluate honestly whether your interface is actually more compelling to the target audience, and whether the interface is even a key decision maker for the target audience. For example, I don't choose what hardware to buy for my PC based on the quality of the vendor's websites. Do I appreciate a vendor who has an intuitive and well organized website? Absolutely. But that's not going to make me spend more money for one product over another. I'm sure that's the perspective of your client, and it is completely valid.

  • Lessons... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by HRbnjR ( 12398 ) <chris@hubick.com> on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:55PM (#9261183) Homepage
    The best lesson any developer can learn is to make sure you have a good graphic designer on your team.

    Sadly, it has been my experience that flash always beats substance. My bosses/clients have always spent all their time niggling about design, layout, and color selection, rather than the actual functionality :S
    • Re:Lessons... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sydb ( 176695 ) * <michael@NospAm.wd21.co.uk> on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:41PM (#9261604)
      The only solution I can see to this problem is the summary execution of the bosses and clients.
      • Mod the parent up as insightful, for God's sake!
      • The only solution I can see to this problem is the summary execution of the bosses and clients.

        And you will then be hired and paid by whom?

      • The only solution I can see to this problem is the summary execution of the bosses and clients.

        That's why he's the boss, and not you.

        You're talking about a web site. That's marketing, sales, publicity. That in turn means pizazz, shine, flash, user experience. The back end is utterly irrelevant, except in so far as it helps the above. The boss understands that, because he's a businessman. A lot of people in this discussion apparently don't, because they're developers. Lucky there's enough room in the w

    • You are right.

      It's rather ironic, really: the best functionality is that which goes unnoticed. It's like the tech support personnel of an IT Department: nobody notices they're there, until something goes wrong.

    • > flash always beats substance

      for a while.

      but yeah, most people with money are fools.
      put them out of their misery by parting them
      from their money: give them what they want.
      think of them as children, not as rational
      economic agents. give them shiny toys, and
      they will be happy. do rocket science, and
      they will whine and pout and probably piss on
      you.
    • So make your work "much more impressive visually". I am a backend guy, but I went to design school [eciad.ca] for 2 years part-time while working as a web developer. This does not make me a graphic designer, but it does prevent me from making design mistakes common to other programmers, my prototypes look almost good enough to go live, and when i do have to call in a graphic designer, i can talk to them in their language and make them feel appreciated.

      Failing that, at least read The Non-Designer's Design Book [peachpit.com].

  • by Singletoned ( 619322 ) <singletoned@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:55PM (#9261187) Homepage
    Create four sexy looking static pages for them and spend the rest of your time working on freelance stuff for other clients.

    That way everyone is happy.

    • Re:Solution is: (Score:4, Insightful)

      by bob_jordan ( 39836 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:06PM (#9261279)
      Off topic answer to previous poster.

      The cost of a flat in london with the same interior volume as that of a 42u rack at a colo is about the same as renting a 42u rack at a colo. Just rent a rack and live in it.

      On topic answers to ask slashdot.

      A) get paid and walk away.
      B) hire a talented graphic designer.
      C) hire a student who aspires to be a talented graphic designer.
      D) try to improve your own graphic design.
      E) customers are impressed by shiny things. Put more shiny things on your website.
      F) make it look good first and make it functional later. The sooner the client has something that will draw in customers, the sooner they will start making money. The sooner they start making money, the sooner you will get some of that money to improve the back end.
      G) if you don't like dealing with customers, don't work freelance.

      Do you need more options?

      Bob.
      • G) if you don't like dealing with customers, don't work freelance.

        The problem with this option is that in many cases it's no longer an optional option- it's work freelance or starve. Permanent private sector IT jobs are going overseas or bringing in low-wage-slaves to do them, and permanent low-skilled jobs are going to "undocumented" workers. The only thing left is freelance, retraining, or government- and government/retraining can take a year or more to get into.
        • You guys... (Score:3, Insightful)

          ... have a problem for every solution.

          If you hate what you are doing, or are incapable, the only honest thing is to stop becoming vicitm and starve to death.

          If somebody with enough education to be designing websites starves to death for lack of work, they deserve to starve.

          Still I want to see proof that people are starving to death for lack of jobs in the US IT industry.

          Whinning, whinning and whinning is the only think I see here....
          • ORTECH [ortech.org] Has plenty on the subject of going bankrupt, becomeing homeless, and not being able to find a job due to the lethal combination of being bad at freelancing, having an American birth certificate, and having too much education to work at McDonald's. It's been a common problem for three years now, since the end of every idiot who could code in HTML being able to get work. I don't see any return to the .com heyday- and most techies I know don't have the people skills to get the jobs their techie skills
        • Finding permanent work can be hard. Howerver given the posters question, I am not sure he/she is really suited to contracting. It is possible to be a good as in high minded contractor but that tends not to be compatable with being a good as in earning lots of money contractor.

          The contractors that do well (as in earn lots of money) are the ones who do exactly what the customer thinks they want.

          The contractors that do exactly what they think the customer needs should really be looking for permanent work, or
          • I fully agree with the statement that the original poster- and indeed most techies, myself included as I found out the hard way- do not have the people-reading skills to be able to read the customer's mind and find out what the customer thinks they want. I'd say 50% of my freelance projects failed because I don't have that skill. Nor do I have the skill to get the customer to pay me to do it right- which is what left me without a job to begin with.

            Thank God for State Government- which saved me after 26
  • Many times... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DieNadel ( 550271 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:57PM (#9261206)
    Oh, yeah. It's happened to me many times in the past. The key is to:
    1) Write a report explaining the importance of each and every piece of your project;
    2) Schedule partial presentations at least every other week;
    3) Write another report showing the weaknesses of your competitor, and providing information as to why your project (and in consequence, your client's project) is technically superior.

    But don't forget that from a layman's point of view, prettier is almost always better (and the case is not necessarily true).
    • He's a contractor, and I highly doubt that his cheap-ass client is willing to foot the bill for all of this bullshit-generation. If they did, they would have gone to a "real" consulting company like IGS or Ass-enter.
  • Wow.. (Score:3, Funny)

    by hookedup ( 630460 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @02:57PM (#9261208)
    I wish it were the way for me... I still have clients asking why i'm not using that animated .gif they emailed me..

    ugh...
    • Re:Wow.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by b-baggins ( 610215 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:06PM (#9261278) Journal
      Yeah. It's not like I'm paying your money or anything, so why in the hell would you want to do what I say?

      The arrogance of programmers is only exceeded by their snottiness.
      • Re:Wow.. (Score:4, Interesting)

        by dasunt ( 249686 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @04:05PM (#9261827)

        Yeah. It's not like I'm paying your money or anything, so why in the hell would you want to do what I say?

        If you are willing to hire someone to do work you don't know how to do, you should be willing to listen to them.

        Example: Lets say a client comes up to me and asks about upgrading his CPU in an AMD 1.13GHz/64MB machine because his machine is too slow.

        I'd ask him what he was doing and probably suggest upgrading the memory instead.

        The problem is when he ignores my suggestion and goes with the CPU -- in the end, his machine will be slow, he won't be happy, and it will look like I did a crappy job.

      • 'Yeah. It's not like I'm paying your money or anything, so why in the hell would you want to do what I say?'

        Well, one reason is that your name is being associated with a very visible work. If it is unpleasant to look at or use, then it will be a detriment to your future employment. Some contracts are not worth taking because they will have a negative impact. Your job should be to provide what the client needs and get him to appreciate it (the harder part).

        'The arrogance of programmers is only exceeded

      • Re:Wow.. (Score:3, Insightful)

        by wcbarksdale ( 621327 )
        Yeah, I can't believe my doctor refuses to write me whatever prescriptions I want. I'm paying for the appointment, right?
        • Sorry to bruise your little ego, but you are nowhere near the knowledge, intelligence or skill of a medical doctor.
        • Not the same (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Lurkingrue ( 521019 )
          You hit the nail on the head when you said you're paying for the appointment -- you're not paying for a prescription. I'm a doctor, not a dispensary. Patients come to me for my interpretation skills, and my ability to "realign" their body. Sorta like a good mechanic. The customer comes in and says "something needs fixing, and I don't know what it is or how to fix it", not "I need oral doxycycline, 100 mg doses, enough for 7 days of twice-a-day dosage".

          Web design is similar, in that you have a custome
    • There are only two types of IT people. 1) Those who think everybody works for them, and 2) Those who think they work for everybody. In my experience the Type 2 IT person is only successful if they are very, very skilled (generally in areas beyond IT), but more often it is a recipe for failure.
  • Here's an idea (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dacarr ( 562277 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:00PM (#9261230) Homepage Journal
    Do a side-by-side comparison of what their site has to offer, and what yours either has to offer, will offer yet is under development, or won't offer because it's a Very Bad Idea.

    Then you can explain to the client in question why "visually impressive" means absolutely nothing if the site is functionally inadequate.

    Have fun.

  • Ask the client "Do you want mediocre? Cause that's what that site is, in the final analysis, and I can have it do exactly that if you want, but in the end it'll be mediocre - and I don't think that's what you want."
    • Ask the client "Do you want mediocre? Cause that's what that site is, in the final analysis, and I can have it do exactly that if you want, but in the end it'll be mediocre - and I don't think that's what you want."

      Or the variant approach I'm fond of:

      "Okay, for $2000, the dog will walk through the hoop. For $4000, the dog will jump through the hoop. And for $6000, the dog will do a double-back flip through the hoop while juggling plates and whistling 'The Star Spangled Banner' through a body part not

  • Hmmmmm (Score:5, Informative)

    by MrIcee ( 550834 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:04PM (#9261265) Homepage
    It is difficult to respond to your question. You don't give us any ideas as to how big your site is in comparison to the 'competitive' site.

    For example, you state they only have 4 pages of content - how many do you have, etc.

    There are a number of things about your post that strikes me as a bit odd. For example... when we bid projects we give a firm one-time price and a firm one-time delivery date. These are always adhered to - come hell or high water. Of course, changes to the specification can cause changes to the price and timeline, and our clients are aware of that - but as long as no changes are added to the original requirements document we ALWAYS meet our deadlines. Your post tends to leave that kinda open ended (I've given two months of my life - well, didn't you SPEC THAT OUT?).

    Secondly, a MAJOR part of our client relationship is TEACHING THE CLIENT what a good website is, etc. Since almost 100% of the sites we do are heavy cgi-bin coded sites (C) with database handling, image processing, etc... there are many factors in such sites that require us to teach the client why one approach is better than another approach. THIS SHOULD BE DONE UP FRONT - NOT AT THE END. You have committed to an approach, but it doesn't strike me that you have educated your client as to the pros and cons of your approach.

    Step 1: Discuss the clients needs with the client and show them examples of a number of solutions and outline to the client why each solution is better/worse than the others.

    Step 2: Have your client give you feedback on which approach they wish to take, and why. Keep in mind how the site might progress in the future.

    Step 3: Deliver to your client a detailed specification that outlines the site, the engines, how they work, how navigation works, how the site graphics look and feel, firm FIXED price and timeframe to delivery. Include periodic goals to show the client (we actually allow the client to critique the design while it is in progress)

    Step 4: Create said site, in said timeframe and for said price.

    At this point, it doesn't matter what the competitor does or did - the CLIENT was offered all the solutions and all the pros and cons and was properly educated as to why each was good / bad. OBVIOUSLY the competitor also selected one of those solutions - if they didn't, you left one out of your explaination. But assuming that you did your work correctly - than the client will ALREADY know the competitors site sucks (or cost a boatload more) and they will know why.

    Most likely the call you will get from your client is *hahahahaha, check out the crap that the competitor did - man are we glad we went with you*.

    • As someone who's spent a good chunk of his career working the strange and murky waters between IT and their corporate customers, take my advice: This guy's advice is right on target. Pay attention to it.

      Remember, a web development business is not a place for you to geek out. It is a business. If you can't run a business, your coding skills are irrelevant.
  • If that's what the customer really wants, take the 10 minutes to grab the competitor's static HTML, change the phone numbers and e-mail addresses, and deliver an "alpha" project. Keep the 2 months of coding you've done- it will come in handy elsewhere, perhaps even for the same customer when he realizes his static website ain't gonna do the trick.
  • by LordNimon ( 85072 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:13PM (#9261342)
    Every industry has situations where the consultant does some good work, and then the client complains that it took too long or cost too much, and he points to some lesser-quality alternative as an example. I don't see how this problem is unique to the IT world.

    And the resolution is the same in every case: either the consultant over-estimated what the client wanted (in which case, the consultant is in trouble), or the consultant has to explain to the client that his so-called alternative really isn't that great.

    Nothing to see here ... move on.

  • by MarkGriz ( 520778 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:16PM (#9261367)
    Ask him what color he wants his SQL database.
    If he says "I think mauve has the most RAM", run like hell.
  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) * on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:28PM (#9261472)
    What the company actually wants is a simple program that is fairly static and simple. But when they hire a someone to program it they will tout it as extreamly important and needs everything. Speed, Usability, Flexibilty, Runs on any platform, Easially upgradeable. Just to see if the developer will flintch. My favorate line was "Lives depend on this product! It is not like any program that you did before where falure will only cost money, Failure in this application could cause people to Die!" (This was from a towns fire department wanting a Crystal Report Report to manage the Departments Payrol and keep track of the previous incodence they went to.) The important thing is to readthrew the tought and get a good plan before hand on what they really want and use your skills to ask questions on anything that you might think they need. Don't assume you know what they need ask them before and get a good project layed out before them to approve. And if they did point to X application that is has less features you point to your project specs and go You told me you wanted XYZ feature in this. This application didn't have XYZ.
    • What the company actually wants is a simple program that is fairly static and simple.

      That's for programming.

      This is web design.

      In my cynical experience, most small companies have no idea what they want in a website and have little, if any need for a website. The only reason why they want a website is that other people have a website.

      The net result of this tends to be a flashy website that has no purpose and isn't used by anyone.

      • Well Web Design and Programming is the same thing. If you think differently you have other issues. With using PHP and MySQL is pretty much programming as much as possible. It is just that the program output via HTML. When ever a company needs more then just a static web page then you in the range of programming.

        While the statement "most small companies have no idea what they want in a website and have little, if any need for a website." was basicly true 5 years ago. It is no longer true any more. Too
  • And what pisses me off more is the fact that a lot of clients order something extremely high-tech, and then they completely ignore the "using it" part, calling up once in a while asking why it's not working.

    A counterquestion: Have you ever been forced to use low quality applications designed for multipurpose messing-things-up because it's easier for people with no programming knowledge to maintain than specificly designed applications that it takes less time to write? (For the record, I'm talking about Acc
  • by realSpiderman ( 672115 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @03:33PM (#9261510)
    The backend for a web site should always take the least time of your task. Just take some CMS (like WebGUI [plainblack.com]) or at least a framework (like Zope [zope.org]) to do your work.

    Then concentrate on layout, but in the first place:
    Make shure you have the fsck**g content for the site.
    Then go back to refining the layout.

    The backend should never take two whole manmonths for a single customer.
    No wonder you have bitching customers.

    • Wow, you've never written any big websites, have you.
    • I have to disagree. I have done quite a bit of web work for my company. We are a software and engineering company, and these pages are used only by in-house staff. I have spent months writing backend applications, and minutes on the front end. Maybe they don't have any animations or massive visuals, but they are very functional and fast. If I was doing this for outside users, I would probably spend some time "prettying" (is that even a word??) it up, but nowhere near the amount of time I spent on the b
  • It seems likes your trying to make this all porpose General Application for a group that needs a simple application. If they want the all porpose application that will let them do everythin then they will go to microsoft and get stuck on one of their application which is often way to complex for their needs. Thats why they want a custom program that is small but yet big enough to do what they want and thats it.

  • Did you point out how much spam that would engender?

  • Your mistake was in the initial eval/quote stage of the project. The geek in you assumed the client would want and/or be better off with a dynamic design.

    In reality, your client wanted fast now over quality and lower long run costs.

    Also, if at THIS point in the project you have to explain to your client what you are doing, you didnt "sell" the project properly to begin with.

  • by itwerx ( 165526 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @04:05PM (#9261828) Homepage
    Speaking as a long time consultant who runs into this all the time - it's not a case of quality vs mediocrity, it's a case of ignorance.
    The problem is conveying the value to someone with no foundation of knowledge to build on.
    In this particular case I would use real-world examples of how your implementation is better. E.g. "If you decide to do XYZ or ABC or whatever down the road you can with my design because I've taken the time to analyze your needs and plan for the future. The site you're looking at would cost more in the long run because of the lack of forward-looking infrastructure."
    That said, I would definitely see about partnering with a good graphics designer to make your site just as pretty (or more so).
    Looks sell, ask any beautiful woman! :)
    • Or when the client points to that site say 'I wrote that site too. Those guys paid me FOUR TIMES what you are paying me for your site. You want a site as good as that one? I can leverage the work I did for them and do it for you for only THREE times what I quoted you for the one you are currently on schedule to get.'

      If he reaches for the checkbook, copy that other site, change the email and phone numbers, and buy me a Dell 18" flat panel LCD.
      • Or when the client points to that site say 'I wrote that site too'... copy that other site...

        Heh, cute! :)

        (For anyone taking him seriously that's a good way to get sued!)
  • That's why I don't do web design. Customers want webpages that look nice and shiny and are completely devoid of functionality or standards-compliance.

    What they get is graphical artists running Windows NT servers out of their homes and webpages that aren't supported and never work properly.

    I don't care if there is money in it, I won't do it.
  • Last example was the web site that I built for my sister's opera singer (my sister is a manager).
    I built a complete publishing system in PHP / MySQL that supported downloads, uploads, media clips, fan club, automatic emailing based on calendar events and geographical location (and user's permission), etc. etc. etc.

    Then I was told 'Thanks, but we want flash'.

    Lesson learned- more sizzle and less stake.
  • If the client thinks that the competitor's site is more visually impressive, maybe it is. The client is the boss; they are paying for the work. Sure, you may have a fantastic back-end, but if the site looks dreadful, the client -- and, to a large extent, the target audience for the site -- isn't going to care.

    Maybe you should have spent half of your two months working on the front-end design...?
  • I had to comment on this one having gone through this with a customer myself in the past.

    Let me bring in an old analogy. In my High School, the Cool/Rich kids had Ford Mustang GTs (5.0 litre V8 at the time). The car (so they thought) turned heads at school.
    About a year later, a kid started showing up to school in a Mustang as well. Of course, he talked about how he paid for it with his own hard cash and 'Mommy/Daddy' didn't buy it for him. Upon closer investigation, we found out that the his car had a
  • by Snerdley ( 98439 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @04:57PM (#9262256)
    I'm sorry to say that I agree with most of these posts: you didn't find out what your client cared about before you started coding.

    However, to hopefully help you out of this mess, here is some light reading that you might find useful:

    1) Read Don't Make Me Think [barnesandnoble.com] (not on safari yet) by Steve Krug. It's the best web usability book out there and will take you all of two hours to go through. His usability testing alone would have found your problem earlier.

    2) Read Eric Meyer on CSS [barnesandnoble.com](no safari) to find out how to make your site look better. If you can find/afford a designer, use them, but learn how to abstract your design from your code and your life will be much easier. (If you like it, there is More Eric Meyer on CSS [barnesandnoble.com] (safari) [oreilly.com] as well.

    3) If you're trying to do public sites, I've found Submit Now [barnesandnoble.com] (safari) [oreilly.com]by Andrew Chak to be an excellent read. It's common sense, but its good to be reminded.

    I hope this helps, and good luck salvaging the gig.

  • Perhaps you just found out what your client wants. Unless your client asked for features that require dynamic content, web forms, and the like, maybe you've been gilding an unnecessary lily.

    Even if you think the client is ordering mediocre design, your job is to provide the best mediocre design you can.
  • My AC 2 Cents (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Well, to be perfectly blunt, this sounds like it was entirely your fault.

    As with any contract labor, you need to be specific and entirely up-front about every little detail and put it in writing. This goes double for dealing with non-techies.

    If you had done this, you would have already established that your CLIENT WANTS/EXPECTS lots of bling-bling and if you wanted to get the job, you would have given it to them.

    Also, you would have laid out your timeline for accomplishing the site that THEY WANT.

    When y
  • Some clients just don't have the budget for a big site. First, to pay you to make it, and then to maintain it after you're done. $20k might be a typical development cost for a good site, but not if it's an intranet site for the local donut shop.

    The important thing is figuring out what will best suit their needs before you're 2 months into development. Suppose that 2 months cost them $20k, that's a lot of money compared to say, hiring a guy for 2 days, one to talk design, and the other to produce 4 pages. Y
  • You didn't understand what the client wanted.
    Probably, your skill set is not appropriate to the
    needs of the client. They want a graphic designer
    to create a visually impressive collection of views.
    They don't care about middle logic.

    Just get the truth out on the table, and everyone
    will be happier in the long run.
  • oh yeah baby (Score:4, Insightful)

    by truffle ( 37924 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @06:05PM (#9262973) Homepage
    Yes I've dealt with this one.

    First, if your client doesn't appreciate what you are giving them, you are either giving them too much or not selling them on what you're giving them.

    Giving them to much - there is no point in giving your client something they will not appreciate. If you can't get them to appreciate it, it's not worth your time to develop it.

    Not selling them - If you are dead set on giving your client something they don't value, you have to convince them that they need what you are offering. This is an uphill battle, this can be a full time job.

    They key is to find out what your client truly wants, and then build that for them. When a client doesn't know what they want, you're in big danger, those are the kind of clients who won't appreciate what you give them (they can't appreciate it if they don't know they want it) and who will come to you with new bizarre requirements late in the project (they feel they haven't asked for much up to this point).
  • by KidLink ( 136594 ) on Wednesday May 26, 2004 @06:05PM (#9262974)
    Put together a list of differences between what you are putting together and what is on the website in question. Make the list detailed as possible, things that are obvious to you are clearly not so obvious to them. E-mail the list in a polite manner to inform the client of the differences, and that yes, if they want to drop any of these features it will simplify and speed up the development process. Then they can decide if the extra features justify the extra time.
  • From your description, you are talking about different expectations. Most of the other posts already addressed the issue of needing good graphic design (which is a different skill from coding), client needs (which you address in the project specification including delivery time), etc.

    Have you meet your agreements? Has the client? Are you doing something the client doesn't need because you think it would be neat to do X regardless of whether the client needs it? Perhaps the client is pointing it out to ren

  • It might be because your client is interested in business value, not programming. Get used to it, the business world wants to make money, not code.
  • Do you drive some simle, shoddy compact sedan, or a two hundred and fifty million dollar Moller flying car? Why did you pick the crappy one instead of the state of the art?

    The next lesson you need to learn in business is that crappy stuff that works "well enough" is actually MORE valuable to most people than something extrodinary.
  • Many people have said "Maybe you didn't take the customer's needs into account" - but that's only one half of it. (Besides, only you know whether you did or not. We don't. For all the rest of us know, you already did your homework thoroughly.)
    The competitor's site, does it work? Does it do the job? And does it have flash, or any code that breaks other browsers, or takes an age to download? (Also ask the same questions about your site)

    Now if it's a well-written easily-loadable site, then maybe you have a

  • I was involved in a simulation project for a chain restaurant that saved them $54 million over the next few years according to their own computations. The first time we showed the simulation to the president of the company--and mind you, there was vast quantities of kick ass technology on display here--his only comment was that the icons for one of the food products didn't show enough cheese. Partner up with someone who likes to make things flashy. He'll bring in the checks and first-time customers, and
  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Thursday May 27, 2004 @02:15PM (#9269265) Homepage
    I wish I had clipped and saved the column I saw some years ago in a controlled-circulation publication, I believe it may have been Industrial Photography. It's a very old problem. The columnist described it as how to deal with the client who insists that you could save very large amounts of time and money if you would only provide just very slightly shoddy work.

    His answer went something like this: "I am a professional. I am exactly as good as the last job I have delivered. All my work is of professional quality, always, and I do not compromise or scamp my work for anybody, ever, because that is not what professionals do."

    He went on to say that a professional must never do shoddy work and must always be willing to risk his job when asked to. He argued that it was committing career suicide to ever have shoddy work in public view with your name on it.

    One of the characteristics of a professional is a sense of responsibility to "the profession" and to fellow professionals, as well as to the person who is writing the check.

    I expect to get flamed by replies from people who write checks or who have been indoctrinated by people who write checks, and I don't say he was 100% right, but there is an ethical dimension to professional work.
  • by ninejaguar ( 517729 ) on Thursday May 27, 2004 @04:51PM (#9271366)
    ...give him what he needs, rather what he asks for. If he looks at a competing website, and thinks that it is "exactly" the same as what you're doing, this is a classic case of failed requirements gathering. For one thing, he obviously doesn't know what you're doing for him. Another thing, if his comparison of that other site to yours is puzzling to you, you obviously don't have his full requirements.

    Obviously, if you just give him the same thing as what that other site presents, he'll regret it. And, you'll regret it as it probably doesn't really cover his needs. You need to find out what he needs. Then, present it to him as a clarifying document so that he can see what you're doing for him, and if he agrees with it.

    Use that other site as a base and start talking to your client about what he finds good about it. Then, find out what he finds missing in that site and yours (if you have something he can see). To fill in the puzzle of his needs, you need to pump him for requirements, and avoid giving him more sugar than he can handle. It wouldn't hurt to put together a diagram of his business process pertaining to the site. But, if you think it's overkill, at least put together a Functional Specification (really just a list of things he needs the site to be able to do) that describes what the site should do as part of his business. This can be the beginning of a contract that you and your client can come to agreement on, and anything else outside that contract is out of scope until the next revision. This will reduce some of the annoyance in dealing with a none-technical person who also happens to hold the purse-strings.

    = 9J =

  • http://www.highveldcs.com/ (making people copy & paste might avoiding killing this ..) ?

    If it is then I hope you designed something more visually appealing and usable for your client. It may provide the information via a neat-o program but it's not easy on the eye.
  • In my case, I was working on contract, but the company chairman had told me that "as soon as [some legal stuff happens that were keeping them busy], we want you to come to work for us full time running engineering. In the meantime, we'd like you to do our new website." I told them what I planned to do - a full content management system, and they agreed to it. No contracts though...

    I also took a verbal description of their proposed new logo and did the design and graphics for it. It's a complicated, ani
  • The posts above are dead on when they say "get a good graphic designer on your team!" By the same token, that also means that you have to develop the entire site with this graphic designer in mind, who no doubt is NOT a programmer.

    My wife and I have done a number of collaborative projects with her on design and me on programming. The first time we did this, it was an unmitigated disaster because I had not taken into account the necessities of "plugging in" the design after the plumbing was done; think of

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