|
Hi Reader! You probably have a contract in your inbox right now that you have not fully read. This is completely normal. Even I occasionally am guilty of skimming contracts in low-stakes situations. I want you to pull that contract up right now. Then find one clause that makes you pause. Because even in good contracts, there often is at least one clause that feels hard to decode. Maybe it’s something:
Don’t have a contract to pull a clause from? Here’s the Limitation of Liability clause from the AIGA Standard Form Agreement. The services and the work product of Designer are provided “as is.” In all circumstances, the maximum liability of Designer, its directors, officers, employees, design agents, and affiliates, to Client for damages for any and all causes whatsoever, and Client’s maximum remedy, regardless of the form of action, whether in contract, tort, or otherwise, shall be limited to the total Project fee of Designer. In no event shall Designer be liable for any lost data or content, lost profits, business interruption or for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, exemplary or punitive damages arising out of or relating to the materials or the services provided by Designer, even if Designer has been advised of the possibility of such damages, and notwithstanding the failure of essential purpose of any limited remedy. Then write down two things:
For the Limitation of Liability clause, you might write down:
You don’t need to be a contract guru. Your goal is to notice where clarity would reduce your everyday mental load. And starting to learn where friction might exist before it costs energy, money, or relationships. In this example, the friction point is the liability cap. And to answer that, you need to figure out how “Project” is defined.
You don’t need to solve everything today. You just need to notice where the friction lives. If you only have 20 minutes this week, the task above is the most important thing to do. But if you have a little more time, keep reading. Chat soon,
P.S. Next week is my mini-sabbatical week, so I won't be dropping a message next Friday. So your 20-minute task next week is to spend time doing something that recharges you: sit outside and drink a cup of coffee, read a novel, or work on a "just for fun" project. Other things on my radar...
|
Each Friday, get a focused, jargon-free legal task, designed for creative entrepreneurs who want to protect their ass(ets) without legal confusion. No fluff, no overwhelm. Each one takes 15–30 minutes and helps you handle what matters, without wasting time on what doesn’t.