Bill him in your normal billing cycle, in this instance he's buying your
time not your output - if you don't make a big thing of it he probably
wont either.

Ask a body shop (rent-a-body) business, they bill for the booked time. 

Just my opinion

Steve

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Beattie,
Barry
Sent: Wednesday, 8 October 2003 4:48 PM
To: CFAussie Mailing List
Subject: [cfaussie] RE: To Bill or Not to Bill?


compromise:

bill him half rates amd tell him he's stopping you from other jobs -
guilt
trip.

cheers
barry.b

-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Kear [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 8 October 2003 4:44 PM
To: CFAussie Mailing List
Subject: [cfaussie] To Bill or Not to Bill?


Here's a scenario I'd like your opinion on .... 

Client has me booked on an hourly rate for a month.  I'm working on his
job,
but he hasn't managed to arrange access to his server so I can do work
on
the assigned job.  So I'm now sitting idle, stopped because of no fault
of
mine. 

Do I bill him for my time spent waiting? 



Cheers,
Michael Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
AFP Webworks.






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