pricing question
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- 25 Responses
- gramme0
Incidentally, what's with all the Anton LaVey-ish gear? Is there a goat's head mounted above your computer?
- vaxorcist0
You?!? $25/hour
huh?!? you're good........
wait! I might outsource everything I do to you and pocket the extra $40 per hour.....
- robotron3k0
25 per hour is fine. just do it all in 3 hours.
- inkpink0
i've had a few of these "10hrs of thinking" jobs.
careful your 10hrs identity development doesn't turn into a cheap logo for them. if you "discover" a logo for them and are asked to wrap-up artwork (+2hrs maybe) thats potentially a deal for your client. doesn't cover your ass for the value of an identity.
you need a signed agreement.
- ali0
They obviously have confidence in your skills.
$75 seems a more fair and standard rate.
- gramme0
Good stuff.
- scarabin0
his reply:
"Make it $75 an hour and keep it under $1K and we're good. That gives you about 13 hours. Do you think I could see stuff by Wednesday evening?"
haha. love that guy.
- At least this guy
has some ethics...utopian - Very nice!acrossthesea
- At least this guy
- HAYZ1LLA0
too low
- noneck0
Here's an hourly rate calculator.
http://bit.ly/B6F2 (links to free lance switch.com)
- gramme0
But keep in mind utopian, that overhead should be built into one's hourly rate. So if you charge $25 per hour, you aren't actually making that much.
Granted, if he already has a full-time job and is doing this on the side, his overhead should be next to nothing.
Even with freelance side jobs though, people need to think about ongoing costs like home computer, software, printer, studio gear, fonts, etc.
- utopian0
Let's assume that you make $25- per hour, work 40 hours a week and 52 weeks a year without a vacation. That equals $52,000- a year, the equivalent of mid-level designer. If you are happy with that, then more power to you.
*to each their own
- utopian0
I give the guy who shovels my snow $35- an hour, just sayin.
- scarabin0
i have around 5 years experience, it's just exclusively agency work. last time i did freelance it was in college, hence the $25/hr rate. i don't know shit about pricing 'cause i've never had to...
the project is for an ex-CD of mine, a mentor.
i quoted him $500 (50/hr) because it seems like a low/mid range response. i'm not really trying to make a mint of him as he's a friend, it's more to help him out.
also i haven't gotten the brief yet so it could be my future agency i'm doing the ID for... could be his new shop (he just left his old place)
- That's a step in the right direction. No more 25/hr though!acrossthesea
- bigtrickagain0
wtf, $25/hr? my base rate is $75/hr for my oldest clients, and i frickin suck at design work. you are charging peanuts for the level of output you do.
- gramme0
$25/hr is way too low for anyone outside of college. How much experience do you have, scarabin? If you have at least 3 years of professional experience, I think you can safely get away with charging $50/hr. And to be honest, if you're good you can easily charge $75 per hour. Especially if you've been working 5+ years. 7+ years, even higher ($85/hr or more). This is assuming you aren't in a major metropolis like New York with an obscene cost of living. If that's the case though, add at least $20 the the above figures.
The above is *especially* applicable since there's an NDA involved. NDAs can create a hamper to your self-promotional ability, that is if the project never makes it off the ground. That happened to me once, and I have some nice work for a cool project that I can't show anyone. To my knowledge, the client's venture hasn't gone anywhere, and until that happens mum's the word.
- scarabin0
thanks everyone, this has been a big help
- arthur0
If a client puts together a NDA, I assume they have a bit of money for the project. At least double your rate.
- ukit0
Way too low man, don't you do all kinds of promo work for big movies and shit? Get some fucking balls and charge $50/ hour.