You own an engineering firm. Mitchell, an engineer, has been engaged extensively in engineering activities in the international market. Mitchell approaches you with the prospect of expanding the services of your engineering firm into marketing consulting. He explains to you that he can draw on his knowledge of the special requirements of engineering work in other countries to better serve the interests of the engineering profession. He says he can draw upon his experience and personal contacts in the international arena to offer to represent firms that want to work overseas but lack the special background knowledge required or that do not have the resources to develop the necessary skills to successfully enter the field. Mitchell explains that your firm can take advantage of the fact that US engineering firms can't raise enough capital needed to develop potential in the international market.
Mitchell drafts a marketing agreement that proposes to develop contacts within stated geographical areas, evaluate potential projects, coordinate project development, and work out the terms of contracts between new clients and the represented firm. For these services, your firm will be paid a basic fee plus a retainer. Both fees will be negotiated individually, case by case. Mitchell also suggests that your firm receive a marketing fee, which is a negotiated percentage of the fees actually collected by the firm you will represent, for the projects he helps market.
1996 NSPE Code of Ethics This is the version of the code archived in the OEC. An earlier version may have been used in this case.