Tagged: rates

12 Mar

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Setting Your Freelance Rates

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Freelancing Isn’t Free

To make a living as a freelancer, you need to be paid for the work you do.  Setting your rates is an important but difficult decision for many creatives entering the market; you don’t want to undercharge but you don’t want to miss any opportunities because your rates are too high. Knowing what you need is the first step in determining what your rates should be.

When I made the decision to go full-time freelance, I looked at my expenses from the previous year to see how much I would need to maintain my lifestyle. Once I had an annual amount, I broke that down into a monthly and daily increments. This allows me to review my earning each day. If I didn’t hit my daily target, I know that tomorrow will need to be more productive.

Estimating Expenses and Hours

Many freelancers use the following basic formula as a starting point for setting rates:

(Annual expenses + savings) ÷ billable hours = expected minimum hourly rate

For example, if you need to cover $25,000 in expenses, want to save $5,000, and expect to bill 1,000 hours, your rate should be $30 per hour.

Here are some tips for estimating how your variables plug into this equation:

 

Annual Expenses:

Take a look at what you spent last year, but keep a close eye on your expenses on a weekly/monthly basis or else you’re likely to have a nasty surprise at the end of the year. Expect your expenses to change from your pre-freelance days, as there are some things you might not have to pay for now that you’re working from home, such as transportation, parking, lunch/coffee break treats, etc. But you’re probably going to pick up a few new expenses, like software, communications, office supplies (stealing from work is no longer an option…), motivational treats, gym memberships to burn off the motivational treats, etc.

Now that you’re self-employed, there’s no employer deducting the proper amount from each paycheck. True, being self-employed allows you to enjoy more tax savings through allowable write-offs, but for US and Canadian freelancers, expect to give at least a third of whatever you collect back to your government. Make sure to account for your taxes in your annual expenses. Depending on where you’re working, you might also have to collect taxes on the services you’re providing. The taxes I collect go straight to a specific bank account, and I don’t touch them until it’s time to remit them to the revenue agency.

Savings:

Choosing to become self-employed means losing some of the financial benefits general employees often take for granted, such as corporate pensions, medical insurance, sick days, and benefit plans. Whether it’s a 401(k) or another kind of retirement fund, it’s critical that you invest your profits so that you can enjoy something better than cat food during your retirement years. Build a specific amount into your formula to ensure you’re putting money aside every year, and then don’t touch it until after you retire. The higher your expenses, the more you should be allocating to your savings.

Billable Hours:

If you work 40 hours per week and take two weeks off per year, you’re looking at about 2,000 hours per year. Do not think you will be able to bill for every hour you work. It’s not going to happen. You’re going to invest time in emails, phone calls, meetings, prospecting, accounting, administration, and more. Your clients are hiring freelancers so that they don’t have to pay an employee 2-3 hours per day to hang out at the water cooler.

This is an opportunity for you to improve your accounting skills – track your time on a daily basis in terms of billable and non-billable hours. In your first year, or first few years, you’re going to probably spend much more time on the non-billable hours. As you progress in your freelance career this will probably change, but if you aren’t tracking it, you won’t really know. A reasonable range to target for your first few years might be 750-1,000 billable hours.

Adjusting your price

Since you’re running your own business, you can set your rates to whatever you like.  If you’re finding that you don’t have enough work, you might choose to drop your hourly rate a bit, and make up for the difference through additional billable hours. More work should be more pay, and you’re going to need to experiment a bit to find out what the market will bear. A good rule of thumb, if 30% of your clients aren’t questioning your price, you’re probably not charging enough.

Be realistic about your expenses, billable hours, and savings. These three factors can make the difference between a successful freelance career and one that involves too many ketchup sandwiches and ramen noodles. Once you know how much you need to make for each billable hour, you can start looking for projects that will pay you the rate you’re expecting.

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17 Aug

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Factors to Consider When Setting Up Your Rate

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How to set your freelance rate

Whether you have just decided to join the shift from the regular nine-to-five work schedule to the flexible hours of freelancing or have been around in the home based industry for quite some time now; setting up your rate will still appear to be quite tricky. Consider these factors to be able to come up with a rate that is not too low nor too high.

YOUR ‘INVESTMENT’

This is one of the most obvious and critical factors to consider when setting up your rate for a freelance job. Make sure you are not working for nothing. Sure, there are limited expenses to take care of in freelancing since it is home based, but you need to bear in mind that the work you do now requires you to use your own resources and these only means having higher bills for phone usage, electricity and computer maintenance.

YOUR ROI & PROFIT

This is business so you surely are to expect some return of investment and some profit on top of it. It is critical that you keep a watch of your earnings to make sure that you are gaining monetary value from your freelance job.

THE DEMAND FOR YOUR SKILLS

There are some skills that are currently of great demand (refer to Global Freelance Market Trends – July 2009). If your skills appear to be somewhat hard-to-find, then you surely deserve some rate extras. However, if you feel that your skills demand is on a decline, it is necessary for you to lower your rate a bit in order to compete amongst those who does the same freelance job as you do or is in the same boat as you are.

THE NORM

This is what most of us refer to as industry standards. This is a little difficult to determine as it varies depending on most factors considered. Additionally, there are very few resources to refer to on the web that has the statistics with regard to the rate of freelancers. Therefore, the best thing to do is to look around and ask. Doing so will at least give you the idea of how much the others charge and compete for the freelance job that you are aiming for accordingly.

EXPERIENCE

Most often think that it is quite unfair to not be able to get a freelance job simply because of lack of experience— this may have a basis. However, with regard to setting up your rate; you can never really argue even if you feel that your skills deserve the same rate as the experienced freelancers charge. This is a privilege that they get to enjoy for staying in the industry. Additionally, clients are more comfortable to pay higher for services of those who are considered tenured as they feel these people are more capable of arriving at quality outputs.

YOUR CLIENT

You should never charge below your standards, however, it is also to be noted that there will be times when you will need to adjust depending on the kind of client and of the freelance job. A job that will allow you to grow in your field should be given considerations despite a lower rate. Similarly, a client who has been very good to work with should also be given considerations during rate negotiations. This won’t simply come out as an act of goodwill, but as an effort to maintain a good relationship with a priced client.

Finally, it is always best to keep a good head on your shoulders whenever you bid or quote a fixed price or hourly rate for a project. Keep everything as standard as possible while keeping in mind the important exceptions that are necessary to be done every now and then. A couple of cents difference is not bad anyway if you get to keep a very good client in the long run.

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