[nycphp-talk] appropriate rates
Oktay Altunergil
nyphp at altunergil.com
Thu May 9 09:25:23 EDT 2002
It's simply supply and demand..
There are simply too many skilled programmers looking for projects like these and the number of projects are not too many. I would be surprised if you could get $50/hr since a lot of people are willing to work for less (after having looked for a job for months).
Oktay
On Thu, 09 May 2002 01:55:37 -0400
"Alan T. Miller" <amiller at hollywood101.com> wrote:
> I joined the NYPHP mailing list in part because I am seriously considering
> moving to New York City in the next few months, although I have to ask,
> considering $50.00 an hour seems to be a high rate there... how can one
> afford to live in New York, and only get $50 an hour contracting? I am
> currently in Phoenix, and it is hard to get by now. I would have thought
> with the high cost of living one would make more. Is it just me or does it
> seem a little strange?
>
> Alan
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "rons dixon" <rdixon at chemweek.com>
> To: "NYPHP Talk" <talk at nyphp.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, May 08, 2002 5:26 PM
> Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] appropriate rates
>
>
> > If no database work is involved then I would charge $50.00
> > an hour.
> >
> >
> >
> > On Wed, 8 May 2002 19:07:46 -0400
> > "Kenneth Schwartz" <kenschwartz at nyc.rr.com> wrote:
> > >I know this question is hard to answer due to the many
> > >factors that could be involved. But I'm just looking
> > >for very general input. I'm wondering if anyone can give
> > >me ballpark idea of appropriate rates/project price for a
> > >fairly 'normal' upgrade from a static HTML site to one
> > >with some PHP enabled dynamic components. By 'normal' I
> > >mean nothing crazy in the data model or code expected. I
> > >need to give a client a project price and I've been
> > >working completely inside a corporate environment for the
> > >past 3 years so I really don't know what the freelance
> > >market will bear. Anyone wish to enlighten me?
> > >
> > >Thanks and best regards,
> > >Kenneth Schwartz
> > >
> >
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> > Rons Dixon
> > Programmer /Network Specialist
> > Chemical Week Associates.
> > 212-621-4613
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> >
> >
>
>
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