>>104579974>In terms of actual contract negotiations, I read over the legal particulars. Things like: "Give us this amount of money, please. These terms are fair. Can we maybe work up this term?" Basically, just anything that I can do to advocate for the client and make sure the client's getting the best possible deal.I mentioned this a long time ago in this very thread.
>A contract has two parties that need to find an agreement>The first contract a company presents to you has ALL OF THEIR POINTS and NONE OF YOURSThey'll send it to you and ask you to sign it. They don't really intend you to sign it.
It is actually meant for your side to read, then revise it and include your points, remove any of their points that you disagree strongly and send it back and ask THEN to sign the revised version.
They'll accept any revisions that they don't disagree, amend anything they feel strongly and then send it back.
Rinse, repeat and after a couple of rounds a contract where everybody gave something and everybody took something is reached.
The #1 mistake I see young people doing in the workplace (I'm a contractor for IT and data analysis) is to think a contract is a "take it or leave it" document. It's not.
That goes for vtubers as well and for every single contracting profession.