Yup yup yup.. can not recall who said that, but think about it.. if 
you are going to get her to sign a waiver for a service you know you 
should not be doing.. well then you just signed your career away if 
something goes wrong.. I would rather lose the client than go that 
road.. and at this point I personally am not talking about salon 
services.. I am talking about web design and hosting services.. if 
it's wrong, its wrong.. you know it, the customer knows it.. and that 
piece of signed paper tell the world including a judge you knew it was wrong..

Debbie


At 08:22 PM 10/11/2009, you wrote:
>What would the waiver be for? I'd be cautious about that. If you are 
>doing professional and ethical work and not going beyond the scope 
>of your practice...there shouldn't be a reason to. I like the idea 
>of having consultation cards...
>
>I was in a class where the waiver question was asked...the educator 
>responded "suppose something does go wrong with the client and she 
>decides to sue you...well now she has evidence that you knew there 
>was an issue but decided to work on her anyway. that's even worse"
>
>I hope this is the type of waiver you were referring to.
>
>Alanna
>
>
Regards,
Debbie  ^v^  ^o^  //\o/\\ ^o^  ^v^  Webmaster - System Admin - IDSR

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