freelance Qs
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- i_monk0
fyoucher1 - Not for bidding purposes, just for recording the time I freelanced for X working on project1 and project2, as well as the work for Y and Z.
And I really can't see charging them for the half hour it takes to get there...
TResudek - That's how I've been doing it, but wasn't sure if that made sense. i.e. I have/had 4 clients (each with various projects) since my last full time gig, but they're all lumped into one entry.
jimbo - That's what I figured.
Mercy buckets to you all.
- Put it into another perspective. Imagine you lived 2 hours away but they asked you to work in house....fyoucher1
- You'd most likely charge them for travel time. If it requires your time, and the client is asking for it, charge them for it.fyoucher1
- That's just how I see it.fyoucher1
- But if it only takes you a half hour and you want to be nice, then don't charge.fyoucher1
- It costs you money to travel. Over the course of a few months, that's a lot of loot you're spending for the client.fyoucher1
- fuck driving 2 hoursMilan
- i_monk0
Bumping to ask:
I've recently done some in-house freelancing, should I lump that in with my existing freelance work and name-drop the studio/clients, or give it its own entry (even if it was only for a few days)?
- jimbojones0
begin charging as soon as you get in their and stop charging as soon as you step out. the don't pay you for driving or riding a bike or walking, they pay you for being there and doing stuff. if you're just sitting there and waiting for something, it's their fault.
don't charge for the breaks.
- i_monk0
c'mon qbn