EnergyMix
Nuclear
- Oct 15, 2012
- 351
Folks
This is way outside what I normally do and I know that I need to hire someone. However, the question I have is what criteria should I be looking for in a mechanical/industrial design bid? How do I choose who to hire in order and make sure I have a good contract so that I end up with what I want while being fair to the engineer that I hire?
For those of you that do this frequently, or who are in the mechanical/industrial design business:
What makes up a good statement of work? (How do I write it so I get what I want?)
What criteria should be used to evaluate a bid? (How do I ensure that I will get what is in the statement of work?)
On this site, the advice is frequently to "hire someone!" So I'm asking if people are going to hire someone, but don't have a lot of experience in that area, what should they look for.
The backstory: My sister, a physical therapist has asked for my help in designing a piece of low-tech therapy equipment she needs. She has a clear idea of what she wants and I've done some very preliminary sketches based on what she described. While I could maybe dust off some of my engineering books and do more detailed design, it is outside my field. I also don't have the time to devote to this, and I feel uncomfortable because of potential patient liability. So I told her that she needed to hire someone that knows what they're doing. And if I have no clue on how to hire a good engineer; how is a non-engineer going to be able to do so?
Hence the question. All help appreciated.
Thanks from a totally clueless Nuke.
Want to know the do's and don'ts of Eng-Tips? Read FAQ731-376.
English not your native language? Looking for some help in getting your question across to others or understanding their answers? Go to forum1529.
This is way outside what I normally do and I know that I need to hire someone. However, the question I have is what criteria should I be looking for in a mechanical/industrial design bid? How do I choose who to hire in order and make sure I have a good contract so that I end up with what I want while being fair to the engineer that I hire?
For those of you that do this frequently, or who are in the mechanical/industrial design business:
What makes up a good statement of work? (How do I write it so I get what I want?)
What criteria should be used to evaluate a bid? (How do I ensure that I will get what is in the statement of work?)
On this site, the advice is frequently to "hire someone!" So I'm asking if people are going to hire someone, but don't have a lot of experience in that area, what should they look for.
The backstory: My sister, a physical therapist has asked for my help in designing a piece of low-tech therapy equipment she needs. She has a clear idea of what she wants and I've done some very preliminary sketches based on what she described. While I could maybe dust off some of my engineering books and do more detailed design, it is outside my field. I also don't have the time to devote to this, and I feel uncomfortable because of potential patient liability. So I told her that she needed to hire someone that knows what they're doing. And if I have no clue on how to hire a good engineer; how is a non-engineer going to be able to do so?
Hence the question. All help appreciated.
Thanks from a totally clueless Nuke.
Want to know the do's and don'ts of Eng-Tips? Read FAQ731-376.
English not your native language? Looking for some help in getting your question across to others or understanding their answers? Go to forum1529.