Update: Freelancer questions what to do with $7,000 left behind by client who quit

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  • Freelancer is surprised at how much money a client has left behind.
  • Client gave me $7,000 in advance to fill their budget, then left the company

    I am a freelancer. At the end of last year a client asked me to bill him for $7,000 for a made up project, so he will have spent all this budget. (And therefore
  • not lose that much in next years budget.) This is not unusual. The verbal agreement was I'd do $7,000 of work "off invoice" the
  • following year. The thing is he then left the company and of course made no mention of agreement.
  • Now I feel weird about the whole thing. I can't see any way forward. Any ideas?
  • A spread of $20 bills that an employee is wondering how to spend.
  • Most people assured them that this money wasn't a huge deal IF they dealt with it in the right way

    maxsimile FYI for a large company $7,000 is peanuts and possibly de minimis in their budget. Consult with a lawyer if you wish but I'd probably just say "Hey it's great to work with you. FYI your predecessor had some extra budget last year so he prepaid for some work and you have a $7,000 credit.
  • We can either work through that or I can refund you if you prefer to start fresh with this year's budget."
  • Professional_Hat... IT Director here. As others said, you might have committed fraud when you did this. If I were to find myself in a situation where I had to spend $7k to avoid losing it, I'd have you invoice me for "pre-paid block hours" or something tangible and clear, not "made up work". It is very
  • unusual for someone to ask you to "make up work" when they could just purchase a block of hours or retainer instead. One is fraud, one is an agreement with clear lines of accountability.
  • The problem is, someone at the company signed off on the payment. It may never be looked at again, or (depending on the services) it might come up during an audit. As a person who operates in this space, I always go over anything my predecessor purchased in the last 6-12 months when I take such a job, just so I know what they were doing,
  • who they worked with, and what I might need to worry about. If they continue to use you, and the invoiced items could be interpreted as a prepayment for services, then sure, be honest and bring it up.
  • Outside of that, you'll have to weigh the risk of bringing it up with potential repercussions versus saying nothing and potentially being caught. You might speak with the departed employee and get his take. I wouldn't worry about the moral implications, I'd be worried about getting sued or having your reputation destroyed.
  • It's also possible the company was run like a leaking sieve and you'll never hear anything about it. These are all reasons why this should never be "usual".
  • Capt-Matt-Pro Keeping an unearned fee advance, without notifying the actual client? It's a bold strategy, Cotton.
  • wokkelz010 I would take the honest route, just tell his manager of whatever. If they find out later and you kept it to yourself you can lose the client.
  • Here's the update, and it's great!

    EDIT: Thanks everyone for your thoughts. I came clean to my clients replacement.
  • She really didn't seem to give a sh. LOL. To those of said I committed fraud, I thank you. In retrospect I shouldnt
  • have done this. Even if it's "done all the time" and the client wanted it.
  • Freelancer considers options of what to do with a $7k budget they didn't plan for.

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