kdw75
Well-known member
We have been dealing with our 4th largest client for over ten years, but over the last year, they have started sending us a lot more work that was previously going out of state. They have become our largest client and they pay when they order. We enjoy working with them and the people we deal with locally are the nicest people you could imagine.
Well, of course, that was too good to be true and for some reason, their national headquarters emailed the other day saying that they needed us to sign a 36-page contract ensuring that we had multi-million dollar insurance with them named as the beneficiary in case of a printing mistake and multi-million dollar policy with them as a beneficiary in case of cyber attacks resulting in us losing their data and finally that we erase all of their files after 30 days including emails, which our attorney said violated federal laws.
Their parent company deals with other printers that I know of which are far larger than us, with hundreds of employees and I wonder if they just sign the contract or if they go back and forth negotiating details. This contract isn't purely for printers, it is apparently sent to every vendor that deals with them. I would think that if they went to someplace like Apple and asked them to sign a contract like that they would laugh them out of the place, but maybe this is common and why places are always in court.
Have you had similar situations and how did you handle it?
Well, of course, that was too good to be true and for some reason, their national headquarters emailed the other day saying that they needed us to sign a 36-page contract ensuring that we had multi-million dollar insurance with them named as the beneficiary in case of a printing mistake and multi-million dollar policy with them as a beneficiary in case of cyber attacks resulting in us losing their data and finally that we erase all of their files after 30 days including emails, which our attorney said violated federal laws.
Their parent company deals with other printers that I know of which are far larger than us, with hundreds of employees and I wonder if they just sign the contract or if they go back and forth negotiating details. This contract isn't purely for printers, it is apparently sent to every vendor that deals with them. I would think that if they went to someplace like Apple and asked them to sign a contract like that they would laugh them out of the place, but maybe this is common and why places are always in court.
Have you had similar situations and how did you handle it?
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