While planning/ doing commissions, have you ever wanted to make better ROBUX/USD, have you ever wanted to keep your clients coming back to you? Of course, you do, It’s a way of making more ROBUX/USD. Here are some tips that I used to make great money without having to be a game creator.
Main points
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Keep it professional 8/10 of the time
It is important to keep it professional. Always use grammar, even if you aren’t the best at it. People would rather see you trying to be smart than to type like a careless person. - Handle the situation with care. If they don’t like something that you developed for them, don’t try to dodge your way of telling them that it’s okay because deep down inside you’re lazy to change it. The only time you should tell them that the thing they don’t like should stay the way it is if you, yourself experienced issues that could impact the entire game or player experience. Other than that, if they deeply want it changed, change it. That’s what you are being paid to do. -
Communicate with the one you are working for. They are the ones paying you, so build that bond with them.
One thing that annoys me and kills the vibe the most is when my developer lacks communication. Going days without messaging indicates lack of progress within the request. 2 days of lack of communication is fine as long as it isn’t constant. Constantly not communicating over 2-3 days+ is seriously annoying and shows that you are slacking. -
DON’T KEEP SECRETS FROM YOUR BOSS IF IT INVOLVES IMPACT ON HIS REQUEST
If something comes in between the job you’re working on, ALWAYS tell the boss. It is very respectful and professional to do so because they are counting on you. Tell them the issue on spot so that they can decide if you can stay on the team or not. Going days without responding or showing progress because something is in between you and the job without the team knowing really annoys the boss. It makes the team think you are slacking rather than working on it. This is why it’s important to tell the team whats slowing you down so that you don’t put a bad image on yourself. Telling them about your horrible procrastination isn’t an excuse. You shouldn’t take jobs if that’s your problem. -
DO NOT CHARGE THE CLIENT DOWN PAYMENTS / INITIAL PAYMENTS BEFORE GETTING TO WORK
I can’t swear this more. Me personally, I do not charge down payments. I go by this rule;
At 50% progress of development, you give me 50% of payment. failure to do this will result in the cancelation of the job.
You can charge 10% payment every 10% of the progress of development, you can do 5% every 5%, IT DOESN’T MATTER! As long as you aren’t charging down payments before getting to work.
Heres why
Charging down payment percentages before work means you are committing yourself to the job and you cannot opt-out of it on certain circumstances. Here’s how it works. If you charge a downpayment of 10% of the full price before starting development, you must complete 10% of the work just as the team likes it before you can opt-out. If you get a 10% downpayment and opt-out at 5% development progress, they have the right to vouch you as a scammer. If you do a 20% downpayment, you must complete 20% work if you want to opt-out. Trying to opt-out under 20% development progress gives the client the right to vouch you as a scammer. This is exactly why I don’t do downpayments on myself or for the people i work for so that i have the freedom to leave WHENEVER I want under ANY circumstance.
If you are RESPONSIBLE and have the brain and time to prioritize work, then I won’t judge you of charging Down payments before development. As long as you’re responsible, respect their release date, respect their rules, communicate, and are professional then you should be fine. [/details]