Both of these issues are often solved by incorporation.
A one-vendor deliverable can cost whatever, and corporations can certainly agree to keep supporting something for a certain time.
Doesn't actually matter if the corporation has one member, and no coherent plan for what happens to the contracts if that person steps in front of the wrong bus. It makes the relationship legible in the way that the contracting party is comfortable with.
A one-vendor deliverable can cost whatever, and corporations can certainly agree to keep supporting something for a certain time.
Doesn't actually matter if the corporation has one member, and no coherent plan for what happens to the contracts if that person steps in front of the wrong bus. It makes the relationship legible in the way that the contracting party is comfortable with.