Contract Negotiation Email Strategies That Protect You Without Killing the Deal
The Freelancer's Contract Disadvantage A company sends you a contract. It's twelve pages of legal language written by their lawyer to protect them, not you. You know you should push back on some cl...

Source: DEV Community
The Freelancer's Contract Disadvantage A company sends you a contract. It's twelve pages of legal language written by their lawyer to protect them, not you. You know you should push back on some clauses, but you're afraid that negotiating will make you look difficult or, worse, cost you the project. Here's what companies expect: negotiation. Most contracts are written with room to adjust. The clauses that seem non-negotiable often aren't — they're just the starting position. Companies respect freelancers who negotiate because it signals professionalism. The ones who sign everything without reading it signal desperation. You don't need a lawyer for every contract (though for large engagements, you should have one). You need to know which clauses matter, what's reasonable, and how to ask for changes without creating friction. The 'Redline Review' Email Subject: Contract review — a few items to discuss Hi [Client], Thanks for sending the contract. I've reviewed it and I'm largely comforta