My favorite part about procuring work: When the obviously unstable private residential client goes on a railing diatribe about "the jews around here" for 5 minutes straight without taking a break to breathe.
Needless to say I hung up on that person, and refused the job.
Sometimes I hate procuring new work.
Carrera
Jul 26, 15 2:51 pm
The worst part of what we do is that it involves other people.
citizen
Jul 26, 15 4:52 pm
Of course, when those other people send us checks, that tends to make it better...
Donna Sink
Jul 26, 15 5:14 pm
A nice check can make up for a lot of frustration, but there is no check big enough to make up for an anti-Jew rant. FFS.
null pointer
Jul 26, 15 6:18 pm
The check was obviously not going to cut it.
Last week I instituted a policy that if you're not willing to compensate me for the first hourly meeting, and then try to haggle my hourly rate (which I'm trying to get a handle on; outside of my specialty, it's hard to command a flat fee without a track record of smaller projects - most of my prior work is huge). That potential client tried to haggle the hourly, questioned the pricing on the initial meeting and then went on the rant. I was like... checkbox, checkbox, fuckyouandthesecheckboxesyoucrazyperson.
geezertect
Jul 26, 15 6:41 pm
Carrera has it right: other people suck!
Peter Normand
Jul 26, 15 6:56 pm
I wonder how the firms that did work for Mr. Trump must feel, do you think they feature their work for the Donald on their webpages any more
Miles Jaffe
Jul 26, 15 7:03 pm
Hadid would have gladly taken the job. So would BIG and Rem. I wonder if Frank would ... he's doing the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi ... the UAE doesn't recognize Israel.
null pointer
Jul 26, 15 7:07 pm
You never really do work for Trump, you do work for developers that buy the name.
Source: past life.
Carrera
Jul 26, 15 7:46 pm
Null - My father had a pejorative phase for the act of people negotiating a lower price (he would have been 96 in October), just find it funny, your guy hates the noun but loves the verb.
Costas Kondylis was Trump's go to guy, it's a sad story that 99% of architects can relate to.
Marc Miller
Jul 27, 15 12:14 am
Null,
For what it is worth I once worked a public meeting where an individual at my breakout table went on about how he didn't want "those people" in his neighborhood- with a smug grin. As an employee, I wasn't in a position where I could say no, so my bosses (the office really) got an earful the next day.
gwharton
Jul 27, 15 7:32 pm
"A nice check can make up for a lot of frustration, but there is no check big enough to make up for an anti-Jew rant."
Everybody's got to draw their own line in the sand on what they can live with and sleep at night. But there are some pretty big checks out there, and they make up for a LOT.
My favorite part about procuring work: When the obviously unstable private residential client goes on a railing diatribe about "the jews around here" for 5 minutes straight without taking a break to breathe.
Needless to say I hung up on that person, and refused the job.
Sometimes I hate procuring new work.
The worst part of what we do is that it involves other people.
Of course, when those other people send us checks, that tends to make it better...
A nice check can make up for a lot of frustration, but there is no check big enough to make up for an anti-Jew rant. FFS.
The check was obviously not going to cut it.
Last week I instituted a policy that if you're not willing to compensate me for the first hourly meeting, and then try to haggle my hourly rate (which I'm trying to get a handle on; outside of my specialty, it's hard to command a flat fee without a track record of smaller projects - most of my prior work is huge). That potential client tried to haggle the hourly, questioned the pricing on the initial meeting and then went on the rant. I was like... checkbox, checkbox, fuckyouandthesecheckboxesyoucrazyperson.
Carrera has it right: other people suck!
I wonder how the firms that did work for Mr. Trump must feel, do you think they feature their work for the Donald on their webpages any more
Hadid would have gladly taken the job. So would BIG and Rem. I wonder if Frank would ... he's doing the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi ... the UAE doesn't recognize Israel.
You never really do work for Trump, you do work for developers that buy the name.
Source: past life.
Null - My father had a pejorative phase for the act of people negotiating a lower price (he would have been 96 in October), just find it funny, your guy hates the noun but loves the verb.
Costas Kondylis was Trump's go to guy, it's a sad story that 99% of architects can relate to.
Null,
For what it is worth I once worked a public meeting where an individual at my breakout table went on about how he didn't want "those people" in his neighborhood- with a smug grin. As an employee, I wasn't in a position where I could say no, so my bosses (the office really) got an earful the next day.
"A nice check can make up for a lot of frustration, but there is no check big enough to make up for an anti-Jew rant."
Everybody's got to draw their own line in the sand on what they can live with and sleep at night. But there are some pretty big checks out there, and they make up for a LOT.
ASGG had something to say about Trump's sign in Chicago: http://chicago.curbed.com/tags/adrian-smith
Of course, Trump had something to say back.