Freelancing hourly rates
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So with the move from Eastern Europe to the Western side, and with my first freelance project on the horizon it's time to update my hourly rates and I'm curious as to what hourly rates do other freelance CPians use. I want to be fairly cheap for this project and I was thinking at Eur 25 /hour. What do you think? Too expensive? Too cheap? What's your hourly rate?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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So with the move from Eastern Europe to the Western side, and with my first freelance project on the horizon it's time to update my hourly rates and I'm curious as to what hourly rates do other freelance CPians use. I want to be fairly cheap for this project and I was thinking at Eur 25 /hour. What do you think? Too expensive? Too cheap? What's your hourly rate?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
Translates about £18/h not bad. If you can get more then good! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
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Translates about £18/h not bad. If you can get more then good! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
Dalek Dave wrote:
about £18/h not bad.
So I'm guessing you think it's not that cheap?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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Translates about £18/h not bad. If you can get more then good! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
Dalek Dave wrote:
Translates about £18/h not bad.
Poor, Take away tax, NI, etc holidays, sick cover. You obviously never contracted then? I'd be pitching along the lines of at least £50 a hour.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
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Dalek Dave wrote:
about £18/h not bad.
So I'm guessing you think it's not that cheap?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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Dalek Dave wrote:
Translates about £18/h not bad.
Poor, Take away tax, NI, etc holidays, sick cover. You obviously never contracted then? I'd be pitching along the lines of at least £50 a hour.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
Well it's a part time thing. I'm still keeping my current job, but doing this project aside as a source of extra income. It involves rewriting an existing application they have.
norm .net wrote:
You obviously never contracted then?
Not exactly. I've been involved in a few projects as a freelancer but was not in a direct relation to the client. I was subcontracted by an outsourcing company (in Romania) so you can imagine the rates were pretty low.
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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So with the move from Eastern Europe to the Western side, and with my first freelance project on the horizon it's time to update my hourly rates and I'm curious as to what hourly rates do other freelance CPians use. I want to be fairly cheap for this project and I was thinking at Eur 25 /hour. What do you think? Too expensive? Too cheap? What's your hourly rate?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
It may well depend upon where in Europe you are thinking of: in the City of London that wouldn't pay your train fares and lunches (slight sarcasm) but may well suffice in a third-world city like, oh, say Paris. Seriously that sounds pretty low: you should look on a site like JobServe[^] to get an idea of what rates are like. Note that daily rates are now pretty much the norm.
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Well it's a part time thing. I'm still keeping my current job, but doing this project aside as a source of extra income. It involves rewriting an existing application they have.
norm .net wrote:
You obviously never contracted then?
Not exactly. I've been involved in a few projects as a freelancer but was not in a direct relation to the client. I was subcontracted by an outsourcing company (in Romania) so you can imagine the rates were pretty low.
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
Well it depends if you're going to be declaring tax or not, charge around £25 without tax, £45 with and it depends if you are working weekends then the fee going up x1.5 for Saturdays, x2.0 for Sundays. At the end of the day it your doing it for a sideline, charge what ever you feel comforable with but don't under sell yourself.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
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Dalek Dave wrote:
Translates about £18/h not bad.
Poor, Take away tax, NI, etc holidays, sick cover. You obviously never contracted then? I'd be pitching along the lines of at least £50 a hour.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
I am a member of the perm employed, £40K pa 25 days and sick, Comp Car and Bupa. and yes, I need a pay rise and a couple more days! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
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It may well depend upon where in Europe you are thinking of: in the City of London that wouldn't pay your train fares and lunches (slight sarcasm) but may well suffice in a third-world city like, oh, say Paris. Seriously that sounds pretty low: you should look on a site like JobServe[^] to get an idea of what rates are like. Note that daily rates are now pretty much the norm.
digital man wrote:
third-world city like, oh, say Paris
I agree, third world, dirty, full of parisians and expensive coffee! Beautiful though, the sunset from the top of the Sacre Couer in Mont Matre is special!
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
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So with the move from Eastern Europe to the Western side, and with my first freelance project on the horizon it's time to update my hourly rates and I'm curious as to what hourly rates do other freelance CPians use. I want to be fairly cheap for this project and I was thinking at Eur 25 /hour. What do you think? Too expensive? Too cheap? What's your hourly rate?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
15 USD/Hour No taxes, no extra payments just plain 25 cents per minute :-) Sometimes paid overestimates occur :-)
------------------------------------------------------------ Want to be happy - do what you like!
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Dalek Dave wrote:
Translates about £18/h not bad.
Poor, Take away tax, NI, etc holidays, sick cover. You obviously never contracted then? I'd be pitching along the lines of at least £50 a hour.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
norm .net wrote:
Poor, Take away tax, NI, etc holidays, sick cover. You obviously never contracted then?
Looks like has has a fulltime job and this is extra work. If it helps him build a reputation, it might be a good start.
Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link -
So with the move from Eastern Europe to the Western side, and with my first freelance project on the horizon it's time to update my hourly rates and I'm curious as to what hourly rates do other freelance CPians use. I want to be fairly cheap for this project and I was thinking at Eur 25 /hour. What do you think? Too expensive? Too cheap? What's your hourly rate?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
It depends on skill rarity/demand. So in the city of London, C++ with knowledge of finance you would be getting a lot more than that. Elsewhere in Europe that would be considered very good. So, whats the job, where is it (even if its remote, where is the client based) and what technologies are you going to be using?
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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So with the move from Eastern Europe to the Western side, and with my first freelance project on the horizon it's time to update my hourly rates and I'm curious as to what hourly rates do other freelance CPians use. I want to be fairly cheap for this project and I was thinking at Eur 25 /hour. What do you think? Too expensive? Too cheap? What's your hourly rate?
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
I don't know about EU, but in USA, most full time employees get benefits nearly equal to their pay. So if you work as a contractor, you should expect double the pay (no benefits) compared to being employed permanently. You are saving them money by doing a job and then leaving when its over. That is why you can charge the extra money. Since contracting is not always stable, you have to make sure your income covers you to that next job. Even if this is just part time and you have another job, the principles are the same IMO. If you are dead set on establishing a low rate to remain competitive, just do so until you have gained a strong reputation. Pualee
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norm .net wrote:
Poor, Take away tax, NI, etc holidays, sick cover. You obviously never contracted then?
Looks like has has a fulltime job and this is extra work. If it helps him build a reputation, it might be a good start.
Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link -
I am a member of the perm employed, £40K pa 25 days and sick, Comp Car and Bupa. and yes, I need a pay rise and a couple more days! :)
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
Dalek Dave wrote:
I am a member of the perm employed, £40K pa 25 days and sick, Comp Car and Bupa.
Not bad going with the skills you gained, I gathered you were still learning c#. Well it looks like I'm due for a payrise as well.
WPF - Imagineers Wanted Follow your nose using DoubleAnimationUsingPath
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It depends on skill rarity/demand. So in the city of London, C++ with knowledge of finance you would be getting a lot more than that. Elsewhere in Europe that would be considered very good. So, whats the job, where is it (even if its remote, where is the client based) and what technologies are you going to be using?
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
The job is desktop application in .Net, no financial or other expertise required and the client is in Switzerland.
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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The job is desktop application in .Net, no financial or other expertise required and the client is in Switzerland.
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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digital man wrote:
third-world city like, oh, say Paris
I agree, third world, dirty, full of parisians and expensive coffee! Beautiful though, the sunset from the top of the Sacre Couer in Mont Matre is special!
------------------------------------ I try to appear cooler, by calling him Euler.
I have not been to Paris since a football tour more years ago than I care to remember. I don't count the bloody awful trip to Euro Disney. Mickey Mouse is not French!
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I don't know about EU, but in USA, most full time employees get benefits nearly equal to their pay. So if you work as a contractor, you should expect double the pay (no benefits) compared to being employed permanently. You are saving them money by doing a job and then leaving when its over. That is why you can charge the extra money. Since contracting is not always stable, you have to make sure your income covers you to that next job. Even if this is just part time and you have another job, the principles are the same IMO. If you are dead set on establishing a low rate to remain competitive, just do so until you have gained a strong reputation. Pualee
Pualee wrote:
If you are dead set on establishing a low rate to remain competitive, just do so until you have gained a strong reputation.
That's what I'm after. I would really like this contract, to built up a reputation as I don't have any for contracting work so far. I want to be a feasible option for the client taking into account my lack of references in contracting as well.
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy