Clear as mud? Maybe this will help.

I want doing business to be as easy as possible, so here are a couple of anticipatory questions and answers for some common concerns. Please let me know if this doesn’t do the job and I’ll try to clear things up.

Why do I have to pay up front?
Mostly, because I’ve been ripped a lot and as a small shop it’s just not worth the hassle of chasing my debts all over the country. Pixelluxe is just one guy and I’d prefer spending my time working on projects rather than chasing down clients with no intention to pay. The half down helps keep me in rent and breakfast cereal while I’m working on your project, while the remainder due at completion makes sure we’re all settled up before you deliver to your clients. I know it’s a turn-off to some clients but it’s worth the risk to me to make sure I’m working with someone who pays their bills.
I have a company that needs a website. Can I work directly with you rather than through an agency?
Not currently, no. In my situation it’s best to stay lean and mean. One of the easiest ways for me to do that is to partner up with agencies that can send me work on a regular basis. I can charge less and do more when I keep my number of active business relationships lower.
Can you set our design up in [Wordpress, Joomla, Drupal, insert CMS of your choice here]?
The only Content Management System I currently work with is Expression Engine. It’s user friendly, smart, and easy to work with. Learning others would take away time best spent getting even better at what I already do.
What browsers do you support
I test all of my work to make sure it works in all versions of Firefox and Safari, as well as Internet Explorer versions 6 and newer.
Who owns the copyright to the code you write?
Once it’s paid for, you keep all rights to the work I do. I send code over stamped with my info and prefer it gets kept there (and that you notate if you modify the code yourself), but it’s yours and ultimately you can do whatever you’d like with it.

Got more questions? Get in touch