[nycphp-talk] NYC Freelance rates
Brian
brian at preston-campbell.com
Mon Jan 20 12:37:56 EST 2003
Jumping at a low rate has a tendency to put you in a low pay bracket for any
future work that may come out of it. People start passing out your name as
'the cheap guy' and that type of pigeon-holing is a trend that is difficult
to change.
That may be easy for me to say, since I am not at a loss for projects at the
moment either. I will say that it was necessary for me to cut some of the
cheap ties lately and make contacts in bigger companies with bigger budgets
and with a better understanding of quality work.
Brian
On Monday 20 January 2003 12:29 pm, Sterling Hughes wrote:
> On Mon, 2003-01-20 at 12:15, Bradley Baumann wrote:
> > Ed,
> >
> > I charge anywhere from 80-120+ an hour. Completely depends on the
> > job, and the company.
> > Someone wanted me to do a job at 3am once, to save their company
> > because their huge ecommerce site was launching the same day, and it
> > wasn't working. Obviously, I'd take this into consideration, too. I
> > charged ~250/hr. Honestly, I think charging 40-50/hr isn't professional
> > ($10/hr is almost childish -- Babysitters charge more.). If you're a
> > beginner just trying to get some money, perhaps that fee is appropriate
> > -- but if you're a professional who knows your stuff and know you can get
> > the job done faster then most others, I defiantly believe that a higher
> > price is more than acceptable.
>
> While I charge around the same, I don't think "unprofessional" is the
> right word for charging less. I'm as busy as I'd like to be at this
> point (although I'll always consider new projects :-), so my rate works
> for my experience and contacts. But, if I needed work, given my current
> experience, and someone offered me a job for $10, I'd jump. Jobs lead
> to experience and contacts, and you can always renegotiate for further
> work. Professional or unprofessional, your rate is what you can get,
> when the offers start pouring in, then you can charge at your liking.
>
> :-)
>
> With that said, I think the original poster should hold out for more.
> $20 a hour is low. State your advantages over a programmer that charges
> $20. But if you can't get them up, then you need to decide: do you have
> a better offer? Evaluate the opportunity cost and don't let pride get
> in the way.
>
> -Sterling
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