In simple terms:
I don’t charge clients for building my general expertise, but I do charge for work that is specific to their product. You pay for applying knowledge to your project – and for any project‑specific investigation needed – not for Fairfield Technology’s long‑term R&D.
More detail:
Fairfield Technology operates on a clear and deliberate separation between general technical development and project-specific application.
Modern embedded systems projects often involve unfamiliar components, complex modules, and evolving toolchains. As part of running Fairfield Technology, I invest time in ongoing independent research, experimentation, and evaluation of technologies that are broadly applicable across multiple projects.
This general technical development – understanding devices, datasheets, power behaviour, software interfaces, and integration patterns – is undertaken at my own cost, as part of Fairfield Technology’s long-term capability building.
Where a project requires learning or investigation that is specific to a client’s product, device choice, or architecture – and is unlikely to provide wider long-term value — that work is treated as part of the project and is chargeable.
Clients are charged for the application of knowledge to their specific product, including:
- schematic capture and PCB design
- firmware development
- integration and testing
- documentation and support
This approach benefits both sides:
- Clients benefit from prior hands-on experience where available
- Project-specific work is treated transparently and fairly
- Technical risk is reduced through informed design decisions
- Fairfield Technology continues to build sustainable, reusable expertise
The result is professional engineering work grounded in preparation, clarity, and appropriate allocation of effort.
