Forum Moderators: LifeinAsia
His site is very graphic heavy (he designs buildings and is fantaical on the design aspect of his site) and I have added as much text and optimized as many pages as I can. The site was originally designed by a graphic artist with no regard whatsoever to the web. My client will not approve any additional pages or many changes to the existing ones since my initial optimization. Thankfully, his competition is fairly clueless so I have been able to maintain good positioning.
I talked him into letting me build a second site that I could actually build and do something with - but he hasn't paid for it and hasn't much interest in it. So it is sitting neglected. He calls me when his leads slow down and asks for a rankings report. Other than that, I feel there is not much I can do for him, tho I really would like to, and have many ideas for additional keywords we could target etc.
I am wondering if I should continue to take the monthly maintenance fee he pays me (it's not much) or if I should let him know that he needs to: 1. either start approving additional pages, and building either or both sites or 2. that I can no longer in good conscience continue to take his money.
Weird question, huh? I just feel so useless with my hands tied on doing the things I know his site needs. But he will not approve funds and he's a bit of a whacky guy. He calls me to chat about oddball things...
I look forward to your thoughts on this.
-webwoman
Some people walk into a store and buy a keychain, and some folks purchase half the store. What can you do? Stop selling keychains?
If he hasn't paid for it, then it's still your site. Maybe there's something else you can do with it.
I agree with martinibuster; you're just being paid for maintenance, give him what he's paying for if that's all he wants and try not to think beyond that. It's always hard when we know more can be done. It's nice when they listen, it makes the work much more enjoyable.
But I like the idea of really doing something with it, and selling it elsewhere. I also agree with martinibuster on the keychain concept. I'm getting paid fine for the keychain, so...a keychain is a keychain.
Thanks to everyone.
-webwoman
I am wondering if I should continue to take the monthly maintenance fee he pays me (it's not much) or if I should let him know that he needs to: 1. either start approving additional pages, and building either or both sites or 2. that I can no longer in good conscience continue to take his money.
If you've got paid time on your hands, there's a third option... get him some links.
::nvision
Then he decides he wants nothing to do with "church architecture" and wants "church design" - I generally ignore his instructions regarding his website, since I feel an obligation to keep his positioning good and ensure he gets a reasonable amount of traffic and leads (which he does)
I think martinibuster said it well - my ambitions are exceeding his - the trouble being his ambitions are unclear, sorta like "I wanna be rich and famous" When it comes to actually paying attention about *how* to do that, his mind wanders off...It's frustrating.
-webwoman