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| Package Fee Proposals So Clients Can Easily Defend Them | |||||||||||
| by Michael Strogoff, AIA |
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Last year, I was retained by an A/E team to negotiate their fees with a new client. The client, a school district in California, was used to paying A/E teams according to a previously mandated state fee schedule. Although the fee schedule was no longer in effect (state regulations had changed), the district's project manager was determined to use it to set a maximum fee amount. From the A/E’s perspective, the fee schedule was grossly inadequate for the complex building types included within their scope (e.g., performing arts center, specialized classroom labs, and full-service kitchen) and for the comprehensive set of services this school district requested. The client’s project manager tensed when we explained why our team required fees that exceeded the maximum amounts allowed in the schedule and that the district had used on their last half dozen projects. The project manager rejected our proposed fees and refused to budge.
The breakthrough came when the project manager, exasperated by our determination, told us that no matter how reasonable he deemed our arguments, he simply could not defend our proposed fees to the school superintendent and the school board. At that point, we knew our mission hinged on helping him present our fees to his superiors.
With this letter, the district’s project manager felt that he could easily defend our fees. He incorporated most of the language in our letter, almost verbatim, into his report to the superintendent and school board, along with his recommendation that they accept our proposed fees. He used our letter as an outline and our bulleted text as talking points when he presented his recommendations in person. The school board expressed their gratitude to the project manager about the thoroughness of his analysis and voted to accept our fees. Lessons Learned Copyright 2002 The American Institute of Architects. All rights reserved.
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