Consulting/hourly rates
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I prefer mercenary. :)
Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services
That works too. My martial skills are minimal, so the 'on-your-back' image, which anyone can work to, fits me better.
Software Zen:
delete this;
Fold With Us![^] -
Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
My model is simple: charge enough that I don't mind being a whore.
Never quite understood this "whore" thing; I used to work with a guy (Glaswegian!) who regularly parroted this garbage. Everybody, bar none, who earns their living by hiring themselves out (i.e. going to work for money) is in the same situation. Calling us whores is meaningless, we are earning a living from our skills or talents. If you believe that equates to whoring then I think you are doing a dissservice to prostitutes.
Using the term 'whore' is descriptive of the disgusting things we do for money (VB anyone?).
Software Zen:
delete this;
Fold With Us![^] -
When I was asked to provide rates, I used to find something I wanted to buy, and quote enough to buy it. It worked at the time.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Wow, I'm getting raped. About $29/hour (with an employer, not contracting). I already knew that though, as my salary is $20K less than my salary report.
Visual Studio is an excellent GUIIDE.
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When I was asked to provide rates, I used to find something I wanted to buy, and quote enough to buy it. It worked at the time.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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I know this has been asked before but I can't remember what sites were mentioned. What are good sites to see what rates other programmers are charging for consulting gigs (specifically the US)? I know some had some other guidelines such as if they don't pay for health insurance, then up x% and such. Thanks!
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
It was just a few days ago, And worth throwing into my evernote. Contractor calculator http://www.erlglobal.com/index.php?pageName=rate
_____________________________ I've often heard of an older, wiser person passing the torch. After witnessing something like that, I'm not sure who'd want the thing.
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I know this has been asked before but I can't remember what sites were mentioned. What are good sites to see what rates other programmers are charging for consulting gigs (specifically the US)? I know some had some other guidelines such as if they don't pay for health insurance, then up x% and such. Thanks!
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
I'll attempt a serious reply. I sit down and tabulate my expenses, house, car, computers, etc., as well as insurance, food, retirement savings. That gives me the minimum I need to earn to live. Then I figure about how many hours I'll work per week, month, etc. By default I figure half time is good to start with, but it gets easier once you have some experience and some clients built up. (Actually I keep a spreadsheet that I update at least monthly to keep track of such things.) Then I check what others are charging for similar service and get a range. I talk to friends and associates to find out what they are charging -- of course, they're not usually my competitors, either! If my needs aren't in the range, then I start looking for a job! To start I charged near the middle of the range and work like crazy to find clients. Once I'm working about as much as I can, then I start raising my rates slightly for each new contract, as long as I'm still staying busy enough. I end up earning slightly more over time and picking more jobs that I really want to do. Good luck! Getting started and getting your client base built up is the hard part. Once you've got some fairly continuous repeat work and a good reputation, the subject of rates gets less important. Plus you'll also have the experience to know what your market will bear. I started at between $30 and $50/hour back in 1991. Now I usually charge at least $150/hour plus expenses for the type of work I do. YMMV!
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E. Comport Computing Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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I know this has been asked before but I can't remember what sites were mentioned. What are good sites to see what rates other programmers are charging for consulting gigs (specifically the US)? I know some had some other guidelines such as if they don't pay for health insurance, then up x% and such. Thanks!
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
Many shops tend to be upwards of 100-150$ per hour. Even those whose employees/consultants are over seas. We charge $80.00 per hour for straight consulting type work: Coding, Data Migration, Training, technical support etc. I think people might not be giving you hard numbers for fear you'll compete with them maybe? Or they just want to goof off which is 100% permissible :) --Jason P Sage - Jegas, LLC
Know way too many languages... master of none!
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So how much is a general "divorce" these days?
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
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I know this has been asked before but I can't remember what sites were mentioned. What are good sites to see what rates other programmers are charging for consulting gigs (specifically the US)? I know some had some other guidelines such as if they don't pay for health insurance, then up x% and such. Thanks!
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
I'm not sure if this site has consulting rates, but it sure does have salaries of employees. People post there depending on location and job title. I think you should try it: http://www.glassdoor.com[^] Regards and good luck
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I know this has been asked before but I can't remember what sites were mentioned. What are good sites to see what rates other programmers are charging for consulting gigs (specifically the US)? I know some had some other guidelines such as if they don't pay for health insurance, then up x% and such. Thanks!
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
I am jumping into freelance and after looking and averaging many freelancing sites,I decided to start with $15/hr for web development(asp.net, C# and SQL), Still looking for a job to start with :| .
It is Good to be Important but! it is more Important to be Good
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I know this has been asked before but I can't remember what sites were mentioned. What are good sites to see what rates other programmers are charging for consulting gigs (specifically the US)? I know some had some other guidelines such as if they don't pay for health insurance, then up x% and such. Thanks!
Back in the blog beatch! http://CraptasticNation.blogspot.com/[^]
One client for my consulting side work, I charge 50 an hour, and not for everything. Reason being, they would go out of business and then I wouldn't get anything, not to mention that it's also a hobby, and it's just play money. My primary day job covers everything. So we discuss what they can afford, and we go from there. I manage all of their servers/software and do programming work for them as well.
Those who are too smart to engage in politics are punished by being governed by those who are dumber. - Aristotle