I was offered $1,000 to create 10 prototypes. I broke the problem down into smaller steps to ensure clarity and to proceed cautiously.
I feel sorry for the OP having had this bad experience and it is not my intention to criticize him but as a professional freelance engineer for many years the quote above holds 2 of the main frustrations (and reasons to decline my interest in projects) that I've had to face on countless occasions:
1. Clients expecting to receive the latest and greatest, manufacturing-ready design for little more than a week's worth of grocery.
2. Clients thinking they know how to break down the project in reasonable steps without having any clue on the effort required for each of those steps.
The first deliverable alone requires the following efforts:
- Design planning / part selection.
- Schematic design (strongly optimizing for power consumption).
- Near-final mechanical design is required as otherwise you cannot define the placement of display, buttons, NFC antenna, battery,.. in relation to the PCB.
- PCB design in a compact space with the mechanical constraints.
- Design and tuning of an NFC antenna within that compact space - not trivial.
- Design of a custom LCD display (requiring back and forth with supplier and test samples).
- Design of various mechanical features to hold the battery, zebra strip for the display, backlighting...
- Full firmware development which will need to include a non-trivial and typically lengthy power consumption optimization exercise.
- Simulation - which is not even relevant for a project of this type, with the exception of the NFC antenna modelling perhaps.
This list is just scratching the surface, how anyone can think that all of that can be achieved in 2 weeks for $200 (gross) is beyond my understanding.
I sometimes tell my clients: Do you realize that after the prototyping phase you'll need to spend at least $10-30k to get it through regulatory certification, another $10-50k for injection molds, multiple thousands for production costs, more thousands for marketing, distribution and shipping? It only takes a single undetected hardware issue in the design to make all of those expenses useless and you might even end up with lawsuits for burning someone's home down. Why are you trying to go cheap on the design itself when this is the most important part for the entire project?
Unfortunately there are many scammers in this business that portray themself as expert freelancers and accept complex projects for a couple hundred dollars only to return garbage work. No professional engineer who has invested many thousands in test equipment, who routinely pays software tool license fees and is skilled enough to sustain a freelancing business in this industry will waste his time to read the specs document for that kind of money, let alone work on it.