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I support the notion of raising your price if he contacts you again. "Yes sir, my previous quote was $35. That was before you insulted me. I have decided that I don't really want the job. The additional amount is what it will take to make me change my mind."
Then, every time he complains, raise the price by $5 or so. "I can keep this up all day, sir."
I'd tell you where to go, but I work there and I don't want to see you everyday.
Don't tell them how long it takes you. He has no need to know that.
Also, your price includes materials, depreciation on equipment, administrative costs, and a whole lot of extras. Ten dollars for an ad would probably COST you to produce it.
Exactly, as I keep telling my clients, its not the time, it's the cost of all the experience, and what I have to pay for in expenses.
By popular request....I am now officially the Enemy of Normalcy.
"What is unobtainium? To Seraph, it's a normal client. :P" -- Observant Friend
To tell you the truth, Seraph, I think you're absolutely right, here. I do think it's very generous of you to price it at $35 an hour. I've seen $50/hour, but not $35. If you did that full-time, that would net you almost $73,000 a year. That's a good living.
I think that's very, very reasonable as far as pricing goes.
I don't think the guy understands what kind of talent and skill goes into something like that. If he thinks it's easy, and wants to pay $10 for it, let him open up Paint and try to make his own darn banner! OR heck, let him try to go online and find standard, royalty-free imagery...he won't be able to do it.
And yeah, you're absolutely right that the $10 is insulting.
I'd considered doing something like this on the side, myself, but I don't know how I'd handle the haggling other than "this is the price...take it or leave it."
Exactly, as I keep telling my clients, its not the time, it's the cost of all the experience, and what I have to pay for in expenses.
There is a fine line, though.
If I were commissioning for a graphic, I would certainly want the artist/designer to take their time with it. But I think it's reasonable not to have to wait an insane amount of time to get it, either.
That said, you sound like a responsible person who would say, "Ok, I'm a little busy right now, this will take me about 3 hours to do, and you'll get it in 2 weeks because I have other orders ahead of yours."
There's a difference though, between "How long is the turnaround for this project?" and "How long will it take you to make this item, because that's how I'm going to base your pay."
By popular request....I am now officially the Enemy of Normalcy.
"What is unobtainium? To Seraph, it's a normal client. :P" -- Observant Friend
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