From bmartin at mac.com Fri Apr 1 23:51:49 2011 From: bmartin at mac.com (Bruce Martin) Date: Fri, 01 Apr 2011 23:51:49 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Message-ID: Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign is going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really eating away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, if in deed it did go up for bid. Bruce Martin c. 917-727-8230 p. 570-421-0670 bmartin at mac.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From papillion at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 00:04:02 2011 From: papillion at gmail.com (Anthony Papillion) Date: Fri, 1 Apr 2011 23:04:02 -0500 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Bruce, I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you are, you might not be undercharging at all. Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices according to your local market. Anthony On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: > > Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign is > going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too > much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. > > http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html > > I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really eating > away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, if in > deed it did go up for bid. > > Bruce Martin > c. 917-727-8230 > p. 570-421-0670 > bmartin at mac.com > > > > -- Sent from my mobile device Anthony Papillion Lead Developer / Owner Get real about your software/web development and IT Services (918) 919-4624 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cajuntechie My Blog: http://www.cajuntechie.com From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 03:39:25 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 03:39:25 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is about $50/hr. Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to undercut our rates... Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > Hi Bruce, > > I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in > NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in > Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work > comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you > are, you might not be undercharging at all. > > Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices > according to your local market. > > Anthony > > On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign is >> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >> >> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >> >> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really eating >> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, if in >> deed it did go up for bid. >> >> Bruce Martin >> c. 917-727-8230 >> p. 570-421-0670 >> bmartin at mac.com >> >> >> >> From papillion at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 03:56:41 2011 From: papillion at gmail.com (Anthony Papillion) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 02:56:41 -0500 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) Anthony On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are > getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is > about $50/hr. > > Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to > undercut our rates... > > Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other > skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to > see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Hi Bruce, >> >> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >> >> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >> according to your local market. >> >> Anthony >> >> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>> redesign is >>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>> >>> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>> >>> >>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>> eating >>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>> if in >>> deed it did go up for bid. >>> >>> Bruce Martin >>> c. 917-727-8230 >>> p. 570-421-0670 >>> bmartin at mac.com >>> >>> >>> >>> > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 04:01:05 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 04:01:05 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4D96D7C1.5090605@kacomputerconsulting.com> Bruce, Also, please bear in mind that 95% of the budget on these "big redesigns" goes to non-technical persons (management, artists, and various hangers-on). For systems consulting, say, you know, where it's just for a few hours or a day or two, and someone restores data and/or deals with a hardware emergency, then yes, $90/hr or even $100/hr is common. Major league Sys Admins and DBAs can also score that much. But at $50/hr, that comes to $2,000+ a week or about $9000+ a month (depending on how many hours you can get per week). For a humble programmer of PHP that is about as good as it gets, unfortunately. I've been consulting in the NYC market for over 10 years, BTW, and also was on the sales end placing consultants for several years during the middle of the last decade, so I know what rates really are... Stand your ground on a reasonable rate as long as you can; the forces at work to undercut us and reduce our income are relentless and brutal. Yes, you as a programmer do deserve to make a decent living, no matter what you are told by people looking to save a buck or two. Good luck!! Kristina On 4/1/2011 11:51 PM, Bruce Martin wrote: > > Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign > is going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging > too much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. > > http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html > > I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really > eating away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this > bidding, if in deed it did go up for bid. > > Bruce Martin > c. 917-727-8230 > p. 570-421-0670 > bmartin at mac.com > > > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 04:17:39 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 04:17:39 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is useful. Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were consistently able to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. Kristina On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate > you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since > I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I > simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is > meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. > > You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in > rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) > > Anthony > > > On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >> about $50/hr. >> >> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >> undercut our rates... >> >> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >> >> Kristina >> >> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>> Hi Bruce, >>> >>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>> >>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>> according to your local market. >>> >>> Anthony >>> >>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>> redesign is >>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>> >>>> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>> >>>> >>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>> eating >>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>> if in >>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>> >>>> Bruce Martin >>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From papillion at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 04:19:40 2011 From: papillion at gmail.com (Anthony Papillion) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 03:19:40 -0500 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D96DC1C.7030904@gmail.com> Hmm...good points Kristina and it brought up a few things I'd not considered. Perhaps I need to raise my rates a bit. Anthony On 04/02/2011 03:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located > in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less > than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole > lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the > standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable > expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark > and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is > useful. > > Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of > expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent > marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would > lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were > consistently able to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which > is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate >> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since >> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I >> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is >> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. >> >> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in >> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) >> >> Anthony >> >> >> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >>> about $50/hr. >>> >>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >>> undercut our rates... >>> >>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >>> >>> Kristina >>> >>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>> Hi Bruce, >>>> >>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>>> >>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>>> according to your local market. >>>> >>>> Anthony >>>> >>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>>> redesign is >>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging >>>>> too >>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>>> >>>>> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>>> eating >>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>>> if in >>>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>>> >>>>> Bruce Martin >>>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>> >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 04:34:25 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 04:34:25 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96DC1C.7030904@gmail.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96DC1C.7030904@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4D96DF91.7040703@kacomputerconsulting.com> :-) On 4/2/2011 4:19 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > Hmm...good points Kristina and it brought up a few things I'd not > considered. Perhaps I need to raise my rates a bit. > > Anthony > > On 04/02/2011 03:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >> Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located >> in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less >> than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole >> lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the >> standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable >> expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark >> and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is >> useful. >> >> Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of >> expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent >> marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would >> lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were >> consistently able to bill 60+ hours each& every week of the year, which >> is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. >> >> Kristina >> >> On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate >>> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since >>> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I >>> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is >>> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. >>> >>> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in >>> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) >>> >>> Anthony >>> >>> >>> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >>>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >>>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >>>> about $50/hr. >>>> >>>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >>>> undercut our rates... >>>> >>>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >>>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >>>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >>>> >>>> Kristina >>>> >>>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>>> Hi Bruce, >>>>> >>>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>>>> >>>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>>>> according to your local market. >>>>> >>>>> Anthony >>>>> >>>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>>>> redesign is >>>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging >>>>>> too >>>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>>>> >>>>>> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>>>> eating >>>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>>>> if in >>>>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>>>> >>>>>> Bruce Martin >>>>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>>> >>>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >>> _______________________________________________ >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>> >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From donnamarievincent at yahoo.com Sat Apr 2 08:50:25 2011 From: donnamarievincent at yahoo.com (Donna Marie Vincent) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 05:50:25 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <153716.32373.qm@web35606.mail.mud.yahoo.com> The hourly rate is meaningless because it depends on how much work a particular person can get done in an hour. A proficient and efficient programmer who gets twice as much work done in an hour than someone charging $45/hr, can command $90/hr. > > I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in > NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in > Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work > comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you > are, you might not be undercharging at all. > > Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices > according to your local market. > > Anthony > > On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign is >> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >> >>http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>l >> >> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really eating >> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, if in >> deed it did go up for bid. >> >> Bruce Martin >> c. 917-727-8230 >> p. 570-421-0670 >> bmartin at mac.com >> >> >> >> ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 02:56:41 -0500 From: Anthony Papillion To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Message-ID: <4D96D6B9.2050605 at gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) Anthony On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are > getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is > about $50/hr. > > Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to > undercut our rates... > > Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other > skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to > see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Hi Bruce, >> >> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >> >> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >> according to your local market. >> >> Anthony >> >> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>> redesign is >>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>> >>>http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>l >>> >>> >>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>> eating >>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>> if in >>> deed it did go up for bid. >>> >>> Bruce Martin >>> c. 917-727-8230 >>> p. 570-421-0670 >>> bmartin at mac.com >>> >>> >>> >>> > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 04:01:05 -0400 From: Kristina Anderson To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Message-ID: <4D96D7C1.5090605 at kacomputerconsulting.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed" Bruce, Also, please bear in mind that 95% of the budget on these "big redesigns" goes to non-technical persons (management, artists, and various hangers-on). For systems consulting, say, you know, where it's just for a few hours or a day or two, and someone restores data and/or deals with a hardware emergency, then yes, $90/hr or even $100/hr is common. Major league Sys Admins and DBAs can also score that much. But at $50/hr, that comes to $2,000+ a week or about $9000+ a month (depending on how many hours you can get per week). For a humble programmer of PHP that is about as good as it gets, unfortunately. I've been consulting in the NYC market for over 10 years, BTW, and also was on the sales end placing consultants for several years during the middle of the last decade, so I know what rates really are... Stand your ground on a reasonable rate as long as you can; the forces at work to undercut us and reduce our income are relentless and brutal. Yes, you as a programmer do deserve to make a decent living, no matter what you are told by people looking to save a buck or two. Good luck!! Kristina On 4/1/2011 11:51 PM, Bruce Martin wrote: > > Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign > is going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging > too much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. > >http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >l > > I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really > eating away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this > bidding, if in deed it did go up for bid. > > Bruce Martin > c. 917-727-8230 > p. 570-421-0670 > bmartin at mac.com > > > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 04:17:39 -0400 From: Kristina Anderson To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Message-ID: <4D96DBA3.5010007 at kacomputerconsulting.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is useful. Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were consistently able to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. Kristina On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate > you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since > I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I > simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is > meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. > > You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in > rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) > > Anthony > > > On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >> about $50/hr. >> >> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >> undercut our rates... >> >> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >> >> Kristina >> >> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>> Hi Bruce, >>> >>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>> >>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>> according to your local market. >>> >>> Anthony >>> >>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>> redesign is >>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>> >>>>http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>l >>>> >>>> >>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>> eating >>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>> if in >>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>> >>>> Bruce Martin >>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 03:19:40 -0500 From: Anthony Papillion To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Message-ID: <4D96DC1C.7030904 at gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Hmm...good points Kristina and it brought up a few things I'd not considered. Perhaps I need to raise my rates a bit. Anthony On 04/02/2011 03:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located > in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less > than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole > lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the > standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable > expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark > and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is > useful. > > Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of > expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent > marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would > lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were > consistently able to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which > is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate >> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since >> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I >> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is >> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. >> >> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in >> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) >> >> Anthony >> >> >> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >>> about $50/hr. >>> >>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >>> undercut our rates... >>> >>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >>> >>> Kristina >>> >>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>> Hi Bruce, >>>> >>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>>> >>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>>> according to your local market. >>>> >>>> Anthony >>>> >>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>>> redesign is >>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging >>>>> too >>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>>> >>>>>http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>>l >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>>> eating >>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>>> if in >>>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>>> >>>>> Bruce Martin >>>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>> >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk at lists.nyphp.org http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk End of talk Digest, Vol 54, Issue 1 *********************************** -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From bmartin at mac.com Sat Apr 2 09:47:41 2011 From: bmartin at mac.com (Bruce Martin) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 09:47:41 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: Thanks for the replies. Bruce Martin c. 917-727-8230 p. 570-421-0670 bmartin at mac.com On Apr 2, 2011, at 4:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is useful. > > Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were consistently able to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate >> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since >> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I >> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is >> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. >> >> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in >> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) >> >> Anthony >> >> >> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >>> about $50/hr. >>> >>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >>> undercut our rates... >>> >>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >>> >>> Kristina >>> >>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>> Hi Bruce, >>>> >>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>>> >>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>>> according to your local market. >>>> >>>> Anthony >>>> >>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>>> redesign is >>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>>> >>>>> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>>> eating >>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>>> if in >>>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>>> >>>>> Bruce Martin >>>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>> >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From jmcgraw1 at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 10:07:45 2011 From: jmcgraw1 at gmail.com (Jake McGraw) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 10:07:45 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: NYC programmers should be charging much greater than $50/hour. What's $50/hour after the Federal, State and Local governments get their cut? As a consultant/part-timer/freelancer you'll be getting paid via 1099, which, at least in NYC, will be taxed at up to 45%. I haven't worked in finance, but when I've done parttime consulting, $150/hr was my going rate. In case anyone is unsure, demand for programmers in many localities is very, very high. In a hiring environment like this, there should be no reason to devalue your work to win a contract. - jake On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:47 AM, Bruce Martin wrote: > Thanks for the replies. > > Bruce Martin > c. 917-727-8230 > p. 570-421-0670 > bmartin at mac.com > > > > On Apr 2, 2011, at 4:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > > > Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located > in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less than > $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole lot of us. > I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the standard $50 an > hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable expertise and > experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark and for costing > out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is useful. > > > > Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of > expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent > marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would lead > to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were consistently able > to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which is not a reasonable > or pleasant expectation. > > > > Kristina > > > > On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > >> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate > >> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since > >> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I > >> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is > >> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. > >> > >> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in > >> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) > >> > >> Anthony > >> > >> > >> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > >>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are > >>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is > >>> about $50/hr. > >>> > >>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to > >>> undercut our rates... > >>> > >>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other > >>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to > >>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. > >>> > >>> Kristina > >>> > >>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > >>>> Hi Bruce, > >>>> > >>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in > >>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in > >>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work > >>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you > >>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. > >>>> > >>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices > >>>> according to your local market. > >>>> > >>>> Anthony > >>>> > >>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: > >>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website > >>>>> redesign is > >>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging > too > >>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. > >>>>> > >>>>> > http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really > >>>>> eating > >>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, > >>>>> if in > >>>>> deed it did go up for bid. > >>>>> > >>>>> Bruce Martin > >>>>> c. 917-727-8230 > >>>>> p. 570-421-0670 > >>>>> bmartin at mac.com > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>> > >>> _______________________________________________ > >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > >>> > >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > >> _______________________________________________ > >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > >> > >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > >> > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 10:16:52 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 10:16:52 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D972FD4.3070101@kacomputerconsulting.com> Jake, I agree totally, however the market won't bear those rates. 1099 income is subject to deductions for home office, travel expenses, meal expenses and the like and as such, has greater tax benefits than W2 income. In actuality, in localities where there are few engineers, rates are higher. NYC is packed to the gills with engineers seeking work. A post on NYC Craig's List for a programmer nets 1,000 resumes in one DAY. Between the high cost of living and the low rates due to high concentration of available skilled workers, NYC's not a great place to be a programmer, for sure. Believe me when I tell you, if there was any way for me to get more than $50/hr, I would have found it. I loathe the situation and am looking to leave the field entirely in the near future. For now, I slog it out and take what I can get. Kristina On 4/2/2011 10:07 AM, Jake McGraw wrote: > NYC programmers should be charging much greater than $50/hour. What's > $50/hour after the Federal, State and Local governments get their cut? > As a consultant/part-timer/freelancer you'll be getting paid via 1099, > which, at least in NYC, will be taxed at up to 45%. I haven't worked > in finance, but when I've done parttime consulting, $150/hr was my > going rate. In case anyone is unsure, demand for programmers in many > localities is very, very high. In a hiring environment like this, > there should be no reason to devalue your work to win a contract. > > - jake From ereyes at totalcreations.com Sat Apr 2 11:20:42 2011 From: ereyes at totalcreations.com (Edgar Reyes) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 11:20:42 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming and the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. For design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and even that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of design, if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes up. ER -----Original Message----- From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On Behalf Of Kristina Anderson Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 3:39 AM To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is about $50/hr. Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to undercut our rates... Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > Hi Bruce, > > I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in > NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in > Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work > comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you > are, you might not be undercharging at all. > > Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices > according to your local market. > > Anthony > > On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign is >> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >> >> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recover ygov-web-site.html >> >> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really eating >> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, if in >> deed it did go up for bid. >> >> Bruce Martin >> c. 917-727-8230 >> p. 570-421-0670 >> bmartin at mac.com >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 12:20:10 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 12:20:10 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> Message-ID: <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Ed, I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who is a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well (over 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the reality is, $50 an hour. Kristina On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: > I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming and > the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 > per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. For > design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and even > that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of design, > if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes > up. > > ER From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 12:26:40 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 12:26:40 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D974E40.8040606@kacomputerconsulting.com> BTW even a cursory search on Dice.com or a talk with any reputable Technical Recruitment professional will show you that the average full-time salary for a programmer, of any type, in NYC, is about 90K a year. This calculates out to, yep, about $50 an hour...including the cost of benefits, and assuming the full-timers have a workweek closer to 50 hours per week (which most do). Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:20 PM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > Ed, > > I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed > otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an > hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who > is a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well > (over 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). > > It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the > reality is, $50 an hour. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is >> programming and >> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more >> then $50 >> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program >> in. For >> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work >> and even >> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of >> design, >> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it >> goes >> up. >> >> ER > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From ereyes at totalcreations.com Sat Apr 2 12:35:11 2011 From: ereyes at totalcreations.com (Edgar Reyes) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 12:35:11 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> Hi Kristina, No, no assumptions, I sure you are a good programmer, but every one I speak to that are PHP programmers specially with as much experience as you have are charging a lot more then $50 an hour lol.. Don't you think that after 13 years you have earned a raise? Than again I really charge more based on a project not so much per hour, but when I do have to come back for what ever time to fix things or small updates my rates start at $75 per hour. Heck if the geeksquad can charge 69.99 to set up a pc and $49.99 to set up an email account why would I charge less than that lol . Bottom line whether is selling your services or anything else it's only worth as much as people are willing to pay for it. but in my opinion you should not short change your worth, like I tell my soon to be clients and my current clients, I may not be the least expensive but you get what you pay for, and I can show clients how a lot of the work that I've have done has paid for it self 10 fold if not more, so it's worth the investment and some of them don't hire me at that time but do call me back to fix the mess some one else makes and then I get to charge them more cause now I have to spend time figuring out the mess that some one else made. ER -----Original Message----- From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On Behalf Of Kristina Anderson Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:20 PM To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Ed, I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who is a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well (over 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the reality is, $50 an hour. Kristina On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: > I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming and > the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 > per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. For > design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and even > that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of design, > if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes > up. > > ER _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From travisvaldes at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 12:46:37 2011 From: travisvaldes at gmail.com (Travis Valdes) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 12:46:37 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] talk Digest, Vol 54, Issue 3 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: The agency I work for charges $125/hr for both design and programming. We're in north nj, and most of our clients are on the west coast. I've done freelancing for clients in NYC and charged $125/hr successfully. A designer working for the same company charged $150/hr. I think it depends on your skills and how well and efficiently you can get the job done. Not all people are willing to pay for quality, but those are the clients everyone prefers to work with. Travis Sent from my iPhone On Apr 2, 2011, at 12:00 PM, talk-request at lists.nyphp.org wrote: > Send talk mailing list submissions to > talk at lists.nyphp.org > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > talk-request at lists.nyphp.org > > You can reach the person managing the list at > talk-owner at lists.nyphp.org > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of talk digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Re: How much is a site redesign worth? (Bruce Martin) > 2. Re: How much is a site redesign worth? (Jake McGraw) > 3. Re: How much is a site redesign worth? (Kristina Anderson) > 4. Re: How much is a site redesign worth? (Edgar Reyes) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 09:47:41 -0400 > From: Bruce Martin > To: NYPHP Talk > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; CHARSET=US-ASCII > > Thanks for the replies. > > Bruce Martin > c. 917-727-8230 > p. 570-421-0670 > bmartin at mac.com > > > > On Apr 2, 2011, at 4:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > >> Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less than $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole lot of us. I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the standard $50 an hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable expertise and experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark and for costing out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is useful. >> >> Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would lead to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were consistently able to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which is not a reasonable or pleasant expectation. >> >> Kristina >> >> On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate >>> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since >>> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I >>> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is >>> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. >>> >>> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in >>> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) >>> >>> Anthony >>> >>> >>> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >>>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >>>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >>>> about $50/hr. >>>> >>>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >>>> undercut our rates... >>>> >>>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >>>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >>>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >>>> >>>> Kristina >>>> >>>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>>> Hi Bruce, >>>>> >>>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>>>> >>>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>>>> according to your local market. >>>>> >>>>> Anthony >>>>> >>>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>>>> redesign is >>>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>>>> >>>>>> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>>>> eating >>>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>>>> if in >>>>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>>>> >>>>>> Bruce Martin >>>>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>>> >>>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >>> _______________________________________________ >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>> >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >>> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 2 > Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 10:07:45 -0400 > From: Jake McGraw > To: NYPHP Talk > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > NYC programmers should be charging much greater than $50/hour. What's > $50/hour after the Federal, State and Local governments get their cut? As a > consultant/part-timer/freelancer you'll be getting paid via 1099, which, at > least in NYC, will be taxed at up to 45%. I haven't worked in finance, but > when I've done parttime consulting, $150/hr was my going rate. In case > anyone is unsure, demand for programmers in many localities is very, very > high. In a hiring environment like this, there should be no reason to > devalue your work to win a contract. > > - jake > > On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:47 AM, Bruce Martin wrote: > >> Thanks for the replies. >> >> Bruce Martin >> c. 917-727-8230 >> p. 570-421-0670 >> bmartin at mac.com >> >> >> >> On Apr 2, 2011, at 4:17 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >> >>> Most programmers on this esteemed list, including those who are located >> in remote areas of the U.S., agree that working for substantially less than >> $50 sets a bad example and undercuts a living wage for the whole lot of us. >> I know many programmers outside of NYC who also earn the standard $50 an >> hour and I think that, for anyone of any reasonable expertise and >> experience, between $45-50 is a very reasonable benchmark and for costing >> out "lump sum" projects, the $2,000 a week figure is useful. >>> >>> Bear in mind that for every hour we bill out, we also incur the cost of >> expenses, business losses through unpaid invoices, unpaid time spent >> marketing, bookkeeping etc. In reality, billing at $25 an hour would lead >> to a poverty income for any consultant, unless they were consistently able >> to bill 60+ hours each & every week of the year, which is not a reasonable >> or pleasant expectation. >>> >>> Kristina >>> >>> On 4/2/2011 3:56 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>> Well, my point wasn't so much an exact price but rather that the rate >>>> you charge largely has to do with where you're providing services. Since >>>> I'm not sure where Bruce is (I am assuming NYC but I don't know) I >>>> simply used a number I'd seen elsewhere. The number itself is >>>> meaningless, really, but the idea was what I was trying to convey. >>>> >>>> You're right though that 'website design' probably does differ a lot in >>>> rate from programming but numbers weren't my point. :-) >>>> >>>> Anthony >>>> >>>> >>>> On 04/02/2011 02:39 AM, Kristina Anderson wrote: >>>>> That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are >>>>> getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is >>>>> about $50/hr. >>>>> >>>>> Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to >>>>> undercut our rates... >>>>> >>>>> Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other >>>>> skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to >>>>> see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. >>>>> >>>>> Kristina >>>>> >>>>> On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >>>>>> Hi Bruce, >>>>>> >>>>>> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >>>>>> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >>>>>> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >>>>>> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >>>>>> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >>>>>> >>>>>> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >>>>>> according to your local market. >>>>>> >>>>>> Anthony >>>>>> >>>>>> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>>>>>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website >>>>>>> redesign is >>>>>>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging >> too >>>>>>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >> http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recoverygov-web-site.html >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really >>>>>>> eating >>>>>>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, >>>>>>> if in >>>>>>> deed it did go up for bid. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Bruce Martin >>>>>>> c. 917-727-8230 >>>>>>> p. 570-421-0670 >>>>>>> bmartin at mac.com >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>>>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>>>> >>>>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>>> >>>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >>>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >>> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >>> >>> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 3 > Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 10:16:52 -0400 > From: Kristina Anderson > To: NYPHP Talk > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > Message-ID: <4D972FD4.3070101 at kacomputerconsulting.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > > Jake, > > I agree totally, however the market won't bear those rates. 1099 income > is subject to deductions for home office, travel expenses, meal expenses > and the like and as such, has greater tax benefits than W2 income. In > actuality, in localities where there are few engineers, rates are > higher. NYC is packed to the gills with engineers seeking work. A post > on NYC Craig's List for a programmer nets 1,000 resumes in one DAY. > Between the high cost of living and the low rates due to high > concentration of available skilled workers, NYC's not a great place to > be a programmer, for sure. > > Believe me when I tell you, if there was any way for me to get more than > $50/hr, I would have found it. I loathe the situation and am looking to > leave the field entirely in the near future. For now, I slog it out and > take what I can get. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 10:07 AM, Jake McGraw wrote: >> NYC programmers should be charging much greater than $50/hour. What's >> $50/hour after the Federal, State and Local governments get their cut? >> As a consultant/part-timer/freelancer you'll be getting paid via 1099, >> which, at least in NYC, will be taxed at up to 45%. I haven't worked >> in finance, but when I've done parttime consulting, $150/hr was my >> going rate. In case anyone is unsure, demand for programmers in many >> localities is very, very high. In a hiring environment like this, >> there should be no reason to devalue your work to win a contract. >> >> - jake > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 4 > Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 11:20:42 -0400 > From: Edgar Reyes > To: 'NYPHP Talk' > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > Message-ID: <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14 at MainTop> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii > > I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming and > the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 > per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. For > design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and even > that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of design, > if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes > up. > > ER > > -----Original Message----- > From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On > Behalf Of Kristina Anderson > Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 3:39 AM > To: NYPHP Talk > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > > That is incorrect. Perhaps a few programmers at Wall Street firms are > getting $90 an hour, but the going rate for normal folks here in NYC is > about $50/hr. > > Although for sure plenty of folks come onto the NYC list and try to > undercut our rates... > > Also "website redesign" is not usually programming but involves other > skills (like CSS, graphics design, etc). I would not be surprised to > see rates differ between that and actual programming tasks. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 12:04 AM, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Hi Bruce, >> >> I think it largely depends where you are. For example, if you're in >> NYC, you can easily command a *much* higher rate than I can here in >> Oklahoma. In NYC, the going rate is $90+ an hour I hear while I work >> comfortably here for $25.50 to $30 an hour. So depending on where you >> are, you might not be undercharging at all. >> >> Check your competition and see what they charge. Set your prices >> according to your local market. >> >> Anthony >> >> On 4/1/11, Bruce Martin wrote: >>> Hi all, I was wondering how much the going rate for a website redesign is >>> going for now days. I am always turned down in my town for charging too >>> much, but I really can't see doing a site for less. >>> >>> > http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/07/18m-being-spent-to-redesign-recover > ygov-web-site.html >>> >>> I think I am under charging. Sorry to bring this up but it is really > eating >>> away at me, as I know I would have loved to been in on this bidding, if > in >>> deed it did go up for bid. >>> >>> Bruce Martin >>> c. 917-727-8230 >>> p. 570-421-0670 >>> bmartin at mac.com >>> >>> >>> >>> > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > > > ------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > talk mailing list > talk at lists.nyphp.org > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > End of talk Digest, Vol 54, Issue 3 > *********************************** From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 12:48:06 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 12:48:06 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> Message-ID: <4D975346.7020807@kacomputerconsulting.com> Ed, The reality of this economy is that small & medium sized businesses ARE NOT GOING TO PAY more than $2,000 a week for an engineer. If you disagree, I mean, that's great, I'd love to make twice that but the reality is that if I ask for $4,000 a week, I'm going to be looking for work for A LONG TIME. And $2,000 in US cash is worth far more than $4,000 in my fantasy world of what I'd "like to earn". I'll even take $6,500 a month on occasion if the project is for someone I want to help. I think that it's great to aim higher, I am all in favor of making the bucks, but in this economy $8,000 a month is A LOT in these company's minds. I agree if someone is getting jerked around and asked for "small updates" (which I don't waste time with, I take on larger projects in the area of $5,000 + only), then yeah. But the reality is, $8,000 a month is what people earn. This is provable, this is reality, and fantasizing about making what lawyers make isn't going to change that reality. Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:35 PM, Edgar Reyes wrote: > Hi Kristina, > > No, no assumptions, I sure you are a good programmer, but every one I speak > to that are PHP programmers specially with as much experience as you have > are charging a lot more then $50 an hour lol.. Don't you think that after 13 > years you have earned a raise? > > Than again I really charge more based on a project not so much per hour, but > when I do have to come back for what ever time to fix things or small > updates my rates start at $75 per hour. Heck if the geeksquad can charge > 69.99 to set up a pc and $49.99 to set up an email account why would I > charge less than that lol . > > Bottom line whether is selling your services or anything else it's only > worth as much as people are willing to pay for it. but in my opinion you > should not short change your worth, like I tell my soon to be clients and my > current clients, I may not be the least expensive but you get what you pay > for, and I can show clients how a lot of the work that I've have done has > paid for it self 10 fold if not more, so it's worth the investment and some > of them don't hire me at that time but do call me back to fix the mess some > one else makes and then I get to charge them more cause now I have to spend > time figuring out the mess that some one else made. > > ER > > -----Original Message----- > From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On > Behalf Of Kristina Anderson > Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:20 PM > To: NYPHP Talk > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > > Ed, > > I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed > otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an > hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who is > a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well (over > 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). > > It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the > reality is, $50 an hour. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming > and >> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 >> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. > For >> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and > even >> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of > design, >> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes >> up. >> >> ER > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 13:01:25 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 13:01:25 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] website redesign In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4D975665.8040609@kacomputerconsulting.com> The agency charges that to the client, and a lot of "interactive agencies" charge exorbitant rates for garbage websites, but very little of that is actually going into the pockets of hardworking programmers. Again I've heard many tales of programmers supposedly getting these rates, but in real life, I don't know anyone. (However I DO know of a lot of "interactive agencies" that have gone bankrupt and/or lost clients due to charging those sorts of rates...) Maybe it is like the Loch Ness Monster or Bigfoot...? :-) Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:46 PM, Travis Valdes wrote: > The agency I work for charges $125/hr for both design and programming. We're in north nj, and most of our clients are on the west coast. > > I've done freelancing for clients in NYC and charged $125/hr successfully. A designer working for the same company charged $150/hr. > > I think it depends on your skills and how well and efficiently you can get the job done. Not all people are willing to pay for quality, but those are the clients everyone prefers to work with. > > Travis > Sent from my iPhone > > On Apr 2, 2011, at 12:00 PM, talk-request at lists.nyphp.org wrote: > From tedd.sperling at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 14:18:14 2011 From: tedd.sperling at gmail.com (tedd) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 14:18:14 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D96DC1C.7030904@gmail.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96DC1C.7030904@gmail.com> Message-ID: At 3:19 AM -0500 4/2/11, Anthony Papillion wrote: >Hmm...good points Kristina and it brought up a few things I'd not >considered. Perhaps I need to raise my rates a bit. > >Anthony Anthony et al: Kristina knows her stuff and charges accordingly. I would listen to her. You will always find clients who say they can find professional developers for much less than what you charge no matter what you charge -- that goes with the territory. You have to understand that you either stand your ground, or comply, but you are the one who has to live with the decision. I had one client, back when I charged on $50/hour (I now charge $100/hour), say to me "$50 and hour!!! I never paid that much for anything. Would you considering working for $25 per hour?" I replied, "Sure, but it will take me twice as long to get anything done." The client didn't hire me, but a year later he came back asking me the same question and complaining that he couldn't find a good developer. Some clients learn slow. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ From donnamarievincent at yahoo.com Sat Apr 2 14:25:17 2011 From: donnamarievincent at yahoo.com (Donna Marie Vincent) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 14:25:17 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <6F97E273-3D4D-4ACD-97C8-2D710A033049@yahoo.com> If you're talking about a fulltime job you can't compare that because your employer is paying half your s/s plus other benefits and you get paid for nonbillable time. I don't know any consultant in the NYC area who is billing less than $75/hr Sent from my iPhone On Apr 2, 2011, at 12:46 PM, talk-request at lists.nyphp.org wrote: > Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 14:39:03 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 14:39:03 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96D6B9.2050605@gmail.com> <4D96DBA3.5010007@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D96DC1C.7030904@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4D976D47.106@kacomputerconsulting.com> On 4/2/2011 2:18 PM, tedd wrote: > At 3:19 AM -0500 4/2/11, Anthony Papillion wrote: >> Hmm...good points Kristina and it brought up a few things I'd not >> considered. Perhaps I need to raise my rates a bit. >> >> Anthony > > Anthony et al: > > Kristina knows her stuff and charges accordingly. I would listen to her. > > You will always find clients who say they can find professional > developers for much less than what you charge no matter what you > charge -- that goes with the territory. You have to understand that > you either stand your ground, or comply, but you are the one who has > to live with the decision. > > I had one client, back when I charged on $50/hour (I now charge > $100/hour), say to me "$50 and hour!!! I never paid that much for > anything. Would you considering working for $25 per hour?" I replied, > "Sure, but it will take me twice as long to get anything done." > > The client didn't hire me, but a year later he came back asking me the > same question and complaining that he couldn't find a good developer. > Some clients learn slow. > > Cheers, > > tedd > Tedd - Thanks, and this is good news! What you say about it then "taking twice as long to get it done" is so true. Hourly rates are based on what we negotiate with the client. Unless the client is sitting there with a stopwatch clocking your every move (a rare situation), there really isn't any realistic way the client can be absolutely certain how many hours were spent. So what it comes down to is (a) what's the client's perception of the work you've done and how long it "should" take [this is why it's known that any client who says "oh, this should not take more than 4 or 5 hours" is no client we want to have], (b) how big is the project? Billing $50 for 200 hours is 10K, billing $100 for 5 hours is $500. Some clients are just not worth dealing with when the hassle/payout ratio is examined; and (c) what are ways you can increase your actual income without giving the appearance that you are charging more? Reusing code, leveraging contacts with existing clients to create new business, cutting deals "OK I'll give you a break here but next time, please be prepared to pay market rates", limiting time wasted on non-billable phone calls, etc. I know I've learned most of this stuff the hard way and had many misadventures over the years. I've smartened up considerably about who I deal with, how I negotiate and what I will tolerate from clients, but also learned that sometimes if you do cut someone a deal [within reason of course!], they'll never forget it and will be invaluable allies in the future. Kristina From zippy1981 at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 14:43:15 2011 From: zippy1981 at gmail.com (Justin Dearing) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 14:43:15 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <6F97E273-3D4D-4ACD-97C8-2D710A033049@yahoo.com> References: <6F97E273-3D4D-4ACD-97C8-2D710A033049@yahoo.com> Message-ID: Also, how steady/big is the contract? My last contract was a 30 day contract at dayrate that was less than 1/9th the rate I charge for adhoc consulting. and more than the previous contract position. However, it was a 30 day contract that lasted almost a year, and my headhunter paid me with a W-2. Therefore, my biggest concern was compensating for a lack of benefits compared with the salary. BTW, I was told dayrate was based on a 9 hour day. It was a new concept to me, but it worked out well. On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 2:25 PM, Donna Marie Vincent < donnamarievincent at yahoo.com> wrote: > If you're talking about a fulltime job you can't compare that because your > employer is paying half your s/s plus other benefits and you get paid for > nonbillable time. I don't know any consultant in the NYC area who is billing > less than $75/hr > > Sent from my iPhone > > On Apr 2, 2011, at 12:46 PM, talk-request at lists.nyphp.org wrote: > > > Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 14:50:43 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 14:50:43 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <6F97E273-3D4D-4ACD-97C8-2D710A033049@yahoo.com> References: <6F97E273-3D4D-4ACD-97C8-2D710A033049@yahoo.com> Message-ID: <4D977003.40305@kacomputerconsulting.com> The higher the bill rate, the less hours you can bill, the less clients you will have, and the harder you will work for that same amount. You will spend more than 1/2 of your time on marketing because you will be competing for a bite of a very small pie. My phone is ringing off the hook and I can pick & choose what I want to work on. So for me, and for my clients, this rate works. I know if they could afford to pay me $3,000 a week instead of $2,000, they would. But they really cannot afford it in most cases. I deal with the small biz market primarily. And again, the tax burden on a W2 employee is MUCH GREATER since you cannot deduct transportation, meals, office space, utilities, etc etc etc. You pay taxes on the entirety of what you make. As a self employed person, after all legal deductions are figured and accounted for, the tax burden is truly negligible if you know your tax rules. AND I can take a month off whenever I choose! Can't beat that. Kristina On 4/2/2011 2:25 PM, Donna Marie Vincent wrote: > If you're talking about a fulltime job you can't compare that because your employer is paying half your s/s plus other benefits and you get paid for nonbillable time. I don't know any consultant in the NYC area who is billing less than $75/hr > > Sent from my iPhone > > On Apr 2, 2011, at 12:46 PM, talk-request at lists.nyphp.org wrote: > >> Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From ereyes at totalcreations.com Sat Apr 2 15:09:29 2011 From: ereyes at totalcreations.com (Edgar Reyes) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 15:09:29 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D975346.7020807@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> <4D975346.7020807@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: Kristina, Ok now I get where you are coming from, see we where taking about 2 different situations, I very rarely take jobs that require me to go into the clients office for X amount of time every day. I like to take projects I will give the client an estimated date of completion and update him accordingly. So if it takes me 3 weeks or 3 months the quote that I gave him stands unless he asks for extra features. I live in Long Island so for me to go into the city for less then $75 per hour is not really worth it cause I have to account for the 2.5 hour commute time every day that's over 12 per week that I'm loosing, I know a lot of people don't count their commute time cause that's just part of the job, but I take everything into account when taking a job, hey that time is time that I could be spending with my family and that's worth a lot more then $75 per hour. But again to each its own, it seems like you are doing well and are happy with your rates and many others here who are charging more are doing well and happy also. So I guess the lesson here is that there is a market for every one. One thing though, one reason why I don't charge less and always try to stand my ground is because some time back when I used to charged less some companies actually wouldn't hire me because they thought that since I wasn't charging them as much I probably was not as good!! Go figure, ones I raised my rates I got more jobs :) people are strange. ER -----Original Message----- From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On Behalf Of Kristina Anderson Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:48 PM To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Ed, The reality of this economy is that small & medium sized businesses ARE NOT GOING TO PAY more than $2,000 a week for an engineer. If you disagree, I mean, that's great, I'd love to make twice that but the reality is that if I ask for $4,000 a week, I'm going to be looking for work for A LONG TIME. And $2,000 in US cash is worth far more than $4,000 in my fantasy world of what I'd "like to earn". I'll even take $6,500 a month on occasion if the project is for someone I want to help. I think that it's great to aim higher, I am all in favor of making the bucks, but in this economy $8,000 a month is A LOT in these company's minds. I agree if someone is getting jerked around and asked for "small updates" (which I don't waste time with, I take on larger projects in the area of $5,000 + only), then yeah. But the reality is, $8,000 a month is what people earn. This is provable, this is reality, and fantasizing about making what lawyers make isn't going to change that reality. Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:35 PM, Edgar Reyes wrote: > Hi Kristina, > > No, no assumptions, I sure you are a good programmer, but every one I speak > to that are PHP programmers specially with as much experience as you have > are charging a lot more then $50 an hour lol.. Don't you think that after 13 > years you have earned a raise? > > Than again I really charge more based on a project not so much per hour, but > when I do have to come back for what ever time to fix things or small > updates my rates start at $75 per hour. Heck if the geeksquad can charge > 69.99 to set up a pc and $49.99 to set up an email account why would I > charge less than that lol . > > Bottom line whether is selling your services or anything else it's only > worth as much as people are willing to pay for it. but in my opinion you > should not short change your worth, like I tell my soon to be clients and my > current clients, I may not be the least expensive but you get what you pay > for, and I can show clients how a lot of the work that I've have done has > paid for it self 10 fold if not more, so it's worth the investment and some > of them don't hire me at that time but do call me back to fix the mess some > one else makes and then I get to charge them more cause now I have to spend > time figuring out the mess that some one else made. > > ER > > -----Original Message----- > From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On > Behalf Of Kristina Anderson > Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:20 PM > To: NYPHP Talk > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > > Ed, > > I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed > otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an > hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who is > a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well (over > 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). > > It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the > reality is, $50 an hour. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming > and >> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 >> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. > For >> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and > even >> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of > design, >> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes >> up. >> >> ER > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From matt at atopia.net Sat Apr 2 15:21:17 2011 From: matt at atopia.net (Matt Juszczak) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 19:21:17 +0000 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D974E40.8040606@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop><4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com><4D974E40.8040606@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <1006454232-1301772078-cardhu_decombobulator_blackberry.rim.net-258896978-@bda205.bisx.prod.on.blackberry> My comments... I know programmers in NYC (straight up php developers) who make anywhere between about $22/hr (junior) to about $66/hr (senior). However, any NYC developer I know who also has systems/DBA skills (even slight) regularly pulls in at least $70/hr, rarely less. Matt -----Original Message----- From: Kristina Anderson Sender: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 12:26:40 To: NYPHP Talk Reply-To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? BTW even a cursory search on Dice.com or a talk with any reputable Technical Recruitment professional will show you that the average full-time salary for a programmer, of any type, in NYC, is about 90K a year. This calculates out to, yep, about $50 an hour...including the cost of benefits, and assuming the full-timers have a workweek closer to 50 hours per week (which most do). Kristina On 4/2/2011 12:20 PM, Kristina Anderson wrote: > Ed, > > I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed > otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an > hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who > is a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well > (over 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). > > It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the > reality is, $50 an hour. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is >> programming and >> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more >> then $50 >> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program >> in. For >> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work >> and even >> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of >> design, >> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it >> goes >> up. >> >> ER > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 15:21:56 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 15:21:56 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> <4D975346.7020807@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D977754.4030500@kacomputerconsulting.com> Ed, More than 90% of what I do is from my office here in my apartment, although on rare occasion I will work onsite if requested and if in the mood to get out a bit. Gives me an excuse to wear my fancy threads, right? My clients are small businesses and if they could afford to pay me $3,000 a week, I know most of them would gladly do so. But in this economy, most of them scrape to come up with $2,000 a week. I am deeply suspicious of consultants who claim to bill out over $12,000 a month since I have been around and know the deal... $100 an hour is great but in many cases, you're not even approaching 40 hours or even 20 hours a week in billings. Any programmer should be good enough with math to see that consistent billing of 40 hours per week and less time spent on marketing is the key to greater monthly income. Kristina On 4/2/2011 3:09 PM, Edgar Reyes wrote: > Kristina, > Ok now I get where you are coming from, see we where taking about 2 > different situations, I very rarely take jobs that require me to go into the > clients office for X amount of time every day. > > I like to take projects I will give the client an estimated date of > completion and update him accordingly. So if it takes me 3 weeks or 3 months > the quote that I gave him stands unless he asks for extra features. I live > in Long Island so for me to go into the city for less then $75 per hour is > not really worth it cause I have to account for the 2.5 hour commute time > every day that's over 12 per week that I'm loosing, I know a lot of people > don't count their commute time cause that's just part of the job, but I take > everything into account when taking a job, hey that time is time that I > could be spending with my family and that's worth a lot more then $75 per > hour. > > But again to each its own, it seems like you are doing well and are happy > with your rates and many others here who are charging more are doing well > and happy also. So I guess the lesson here is that there is a market for > every one. One thing though, one reason why I don't charge less and always > try to stand my ground is because some time back when I used to charged less > some companies actually wouldn't hire me because they thought that since I > wasn't charging them as much I probably was not as good!! Go figure, ones I > raised my rates I got more jobs :) people are strange. > > ER From mmwaldman at nyc.rr.com Sat Apr 2 15:32:18 2011 From: mmwaldman at nyc.rr.com (Michele Waldman) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 15:32:18 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com><4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: In '99, I was making $70-85/hr as an Oracle/C Programmer. The interesting thing is how much more you have to know to be a web developer, especially if you work on the front end and the backend. Know more, less money. Michele -------------------------------------------------- From: "Kristina Anderson" Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:20 PM To: "NYPHP Talk" Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > Ed, > > I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed > otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an hour, > and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who is a PHP > programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well (over 20 other > people that I personally know and have worked with). > > It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the > reality is, $50 an hour. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming >> and >> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then >> $50 >> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. >> For >> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and >> even >> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of >> design, >> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes >> up. >> >> ER > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sat Apr 2 15:41:59 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 15:41:59 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com><4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D977C07.5030008@kacomputerconsulting.com> In 1999 I knew basically not a whole lot, I was a green a** newbie with some Javascript skills and a liberal arts degree, and I pulled $50/hr....true story! LOL. Know more, less money, you got it! Kristina On 4/2/2011 3:32 PM, Michele Waldman wrote: > In '99, I was making $70-85/hr as an Oracle/C Programmer. > > The interesting thing is how much more you have to know to be a web > developer, especially if you work on the front end and the backend. > > Know more, less money. > > Michele > > -------------------------------------------------- > From: "Kristina Anderson" > Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 12:20 PM > To: "NYPHP Talk" > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > >> Ed, >> >> I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed >> otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an >> hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who >> is a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well >> (over 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). >> >> It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the >> reality is, $50 an hour. >> >> Kristina >> >> On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >>> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is >>> programming and >>> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more >>> then $50 >>> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program >>> in. For >>> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work >>> and even >>> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of >>> design, >>> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it >>> goes >>> up. >>> >>> ER >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From papillion at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 15:55:57 2011 From: papillion at gmail.com (Anthony Papillion) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 14:55:57 -0500 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product Message-ID: So since the topic of what to charge per hour seems to be being vigoriously discussed, I thought I'd throw something out there that's bugged me for a while. How to price a PHP product. I'm starting my third PHP product (an appointment reminder for a software system I wrote) and I'm having a lot of problems coming up with a price. I don't want to set it too low, like I seem to have done with my rates, but I don't want to over price it either. The system is straight PHP, JavaScript, JQuery, and HTML, so it's not anything terribly complex but it does provider a nice extension to the existing software. What is the best way to price such software? Thanks! Anthony -- Sent from my mobile device Anthony Papillion Lead Developer / Owner Get real about your software/web development and IT Services (918) 919-4624 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cajuntechie My Blog: http://www.cajuntechie.com From ramons at gmx.net Sat Apr 2 18:59:10 2011 From: ramons at gmx.net (David Krings) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 18:59:10 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com><4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> On 4/2/2011 3:32 PM, Michele Waldman wrote: > In '99, I was making $70-85/hr as an Oracle/C Programmer. Interesting discussion, but what baffles me beyond repair is how much more developers are paid compared to QA or support staff. The difficulty of work is about the same, although for a support job I think it is even higher (think about it, the supporters have to defend what the developers goofed up). The skill set is somewhat different, but thinking about what I get as a veteran QA Analyst and the hourly rates you are discussing makes me just wanna cry. OK, in all fairness, I'm not working in City, but upstate. Still, I think that if you can steadily land jobs that pay 50$ an hour you are doing quite well. David From frankcefalu at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 19:07:15 2011 From: frankcefalu at gmail.com (Frank Cefalu) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 19:07:15 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: Been programming in nyc for 10 years now. The average rate for senior PHP development is 50-100 an hour. I've been to a few receiving rates of 75 an hour On Apr 2, 2011 12:20 PM, "Kristina Anderson" wrote: > Ed, > > I've been a programmer in NYC for almost 13 years (maybe you assumed > otherwise because of my gender), I started out in 1998 making $50 an > hour, and I'm still making $50 an hour, and everyone else I know who is > a PHP programmer in NYC is making between $45-55 an hour as well (over > 20 other people that I personally know and have worked with). > > It's great to talk about what "should be" or what "could be" but the > reality is, $50 an hour. > > Kristina > > On 4/2/2011 11:20 AM, Edgar Reyes wrote: >> I think we are talking about 2 different things here, one is programming and >> the other is designing, Krista programmers in NYC make a lot more then $50 >> per hour, depending on your skill set and what language you program in. For >> design work yes $50 per hour is about right for simple design work and even >> that is in the lower end, and that can vary depending on the sort of design, >> if it involves some sort of specialize CSS and or flash etc. then it goes >> up. >> >> ER > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From frankcefalu at gmail.com Sat Apr 2 20:22:07 2011 From: frankcefalu at gmail.com (Frank Cefalu) Date: Sat, 2 Apr 2011 20:22:07 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> Message-ID: You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. You don't need to do any architecture based on traffic retention, judge framework usage etc. On Apr 2, 2011 6:59 PM, "David Krings" wrote: > On 4/2/2011 3:32 PM, Michele Waldman wrote: >> In '99, I was making $70-85/hr as an Oracle/C Programmer. > > Interesting discussion, but what baffles me beyond repair is how much more > developers are paid compared to QA or support staff. The difficulty of work is > about the same, although for a support job I think it is even higher (think > about it, the supporters have to defend what the developers goofed up). The > skill set is somewhat different, but thinking about what I get as a veteran QA > Analyst and the hourly rates you are discussing makes me just wanna cry. OK, > in all fairness, I'm not working in City, but upstate. Still, I think that if > you can steadily land jobs that pay 50$ an hour you are doing quite well. > > David > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ramons at gmx.net Sat Apr 2 21:21:58 2011 From: ramons at gmx.net (David Krings) Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 21:21:58 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> Message-ID: <4D97CBB6.7040708@gmx.net> On 4/2/2011 8:22 PM, Frank Cefalu wrote: > You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. You don't need to do > any architecture based on traffic retention, judge framework usage etc. Not in my QA world.... David From frankcefalu at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 02:01:50 2011 From: frankcefalu at gmail.com (Frank Cefalu) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 02:01:50 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D97CBB6.7040708@gmx.net> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> <4D97CBB6.7040708@gmx.net> Message-ID: Not saying your tasks are easier or less stressful. But, I guess you can look at senior devs/leads as the architect of the house, and your the house inspector. Get what I mean? Not saying one out weighs the other, just one is more involved in architecture, and the other is involved in making sure it meets city requirements aka business reqs. ---- *Frank Cefalu* On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:21 PM, David Krings wrote: > On 4/2/2011 8:22 PM, Frank Cefalu wrote: > >> You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. You don't need to >> do >> any architecture based on traffic retention, judge framework usage etc. >> > > Not in my QA world.... > > > David > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sun Apr 3 07:10:42 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sun, 03 Apr 2011 07:10:42 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> <4D97CBB6.7040708@gmx.net> Message-ID: <4D9855B2.1050308@kacomputerconsulting.com> The decision on what to build comes down from on high where some confab of management pinheads make decisions based on "wow this will make us rich if we hire some cheap labor to build it for us" and "my Uncle Frank told me PHP was the way to go while we were golfing last week". The tech lead then assembles a team of inexperienced, cheap programmers (because management has decided the budget, too) who crank out a horrifying batch of really awful code that kind of looks like it might do what management requested be built, with the tech lead taking all the credit for anything good that might happen along the way, and blaming the programmers he personally likes the least for whatever bad things inevitably occur. This poo poo stew then gets dumped into the lap of our hapless "QA Analyst" who is expected to work a miracle on par with parting the Red Sea by turning it into Tasty Texas Chili for distribution to the masses. Kristina \\On 4/3/2011 2:01 AM, Frank Cefalu wrote: > Not saying your tasks are easier or less stressful. > > But, I guess you can look at senior devs/leads as the architect of the > house, and your the house inspector. > > Get what I mean? Not saying one out weighs the other, just one is more > involved in architecture, and the other is involved in making sure it > meets city requirements aka business reqs. > > > ---- > *Frank Cefalu* > > > On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:21 PM, David Krings > wrote: > > On 4/2/2011 8:22 PM, Frank Cefalu wrote: > > You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. You > don't need to do > any architecture based on traffic retention, judge framework > usage etc. > > > Not in my QA world.... > > > David > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dorgan at donaldorgan.com Sun Apr 3 10:01:19 2011 From: dorgan at donaldorgan.com (Donald J. Organ IV) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 10:01:19 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D9855B2.1050308@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <9478430.4.1301839279110.JavaMail.root@mail.twoguyshosting.com> So what your saying is after your QS person finds issues, they go into the code/design and fix it themselves?? ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kristina Anderson" To: "NYPHP Talk" Sent: Sunday, April 3, 2011 7:10:42 AM Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? The decision on what to build comes down from on high where some confab of management pinheads make decisions based on "wow this will make us rich if we hire some cheap labor to build it for us" and "my Uncle Frank told me PHP was the way to go while we were golfing last week". The tech lead then assembles a team of inexperienced, cheap programmers (because management has decided the budget, too) who crank out a horrifying batch of really awful code that kind of looks like it might do what management requested be built, with the tech lead taking all the credit for anything good that might happen along the way, and blaming the programmers he personally likes the least for whatever bad things inevitably occur. This poo poo stew then gets dumped into the lap of our hapless "QA Analyst" who is expected to work a miracle on par with parting the Red Sea by turning it into Tasty Texas Chili for distribution to the masses. Kristina \\On 4/3/2011 2:01 AM, Frank Cefalu wrote: Not saying your tasks are easier or less stressful. But, I guess you can look at senior devs/leads as the architect of the house, and your the house inspector. Get what I mean? Not saying one out weighs the other, just one is more involved in architecture, and the other is involved in making sure it meets city requirements aka business reqs. ---- Frank Cefalu On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:21 PM, David Krings < ramons at gmx.net > wrote: On 4/2/2011 8:22 PM, Frank Cefalu wrote: You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. You don't need to do any architecture based on traffic retention, judge framework usage etc. Not in my QA world.... David _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From frankcefalu at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 10:17:50 2011 From: frankcefalu at gmail.com (Frank Cefalu) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 10:17:50 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D9855B2.1050308@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> <4D97CBB6.7040708@gmx.net> <4D9855B2.1050308@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: A lead is a mentor. It is unfortunate if you work in a place where the lead blames others. I never did such a thing and always gave credit. You as a lead decide who is on your team and fight for that, for the same crappy code you mention I always hire mid to senior level otherwise I am going to spend more time hot fixing mistakes and training than getting the project done correctly. Not going to address the PHP comment ;) On Apr 3, 2011 7:11 AM, "Kristina Anderson" wrote: > The decision on what to build comes down from on high where some confab > of management pinheads make decisions based on "wow this will make us > rich if we hire some cheap labor to build it for us" and "my Uncle Frank > told me PHP was the way to go while we were golfing last week". > > The tech lead then assembles a team of inexperienced, cheap programmers > (because management has decided the budget, too) who crank out a > horrifying batch of really awful code that kind of looks like it might > do what management requested be built, with the tech lead taking all the > credit for anything good that might happen along the way, and blaming > the programmers he personally likes the least for whatever bad things > inevitably occur. > > This poo poo stew then gets dumped into the lap of our hapless "QA > Analyst" who is expected to work a miracle on par with parting the Red > Sea by turning it into Tasty Texas Chili for distribution to the masses. > > Kristina > > > > > \\On 4/3/2011 2:01 AM, Frank Cefalu wrote: >> Not saying your tasks are easier or less stressful. >> >> But, I guess you can look at senior devs/leads as the architect of the >> house, and your the house inspector. >> >> Get what I mean? Not saying one out weighs the other, just one is more >> involved in architecture, and the other is involved in making sure it >> meets city requirements aka business reqs. >> >> >> ---- >> *Frank Cefalu* >> >> >> On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:21 PM, David Krings > > wrote: >> >> On 4/2/2011 8:22 PM, Frank Cefalu wrote: >> >> You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. You >> don't need to do >> any architecture based on traffic retention, judge framework >> usage etc. >> >> >> Not in my QA world.... >> >> >> David >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Sun Apr 3 10:27:01 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Sun, 03 Apr 2011 10:27:01 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <9478430.4.1301839279110.JavaMail.root@mail.twoguyshosting.com> References: <9478430.4.1301839279110.JavaMail.root@mail.twoguyshosting.com> Message-ID: <4D9883B5.3060103@kacomputerconsulting.com> We'd have to ask David to clarify, but from what he's posted, his responsibilities seem to extend beyond just finding the issues, yes...David? On 4/3/2011 10:01 AM, Donald J. Organ IV wrote: > So what your saying is after your QS person finds issues, they go into > the code/design and fix it themselves?? > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > *From: *"Kristina Anderson" > *To: *"NYPHP Talk" > *Sent: *Sunday, April 3, 2011 7:10:42 AM > *Subject: *Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? > > The decision on what to build comes down from on high where some > confab of management pinheads make decisions based on "wow this will > make us rich if we hire some cheap labor to build it for us" and "my > Uncle Frank told me PHP was the way to go while we were golfing last > week". > > The tech lead then assembles a team of inexperienced, cheap > programmers (because management has decided the budget, too) who crank > out a horrifying batch of really awful code that kind of looks like it > might do what management requested be built, with the tech lead taking > all the credit for anything good that might happen along the way, and > blaming the programmers he personally likes the least for whatever bad > things inevitably occur. > > This poo poo stew then gets dumped into the lap of our hapless "QA > Analyst" who is expected to work a miracle on par with parting the Red > Sea by turning it into Tasty Texas Chili for distribution to the masses. > > Kristina > > > > > \\On 4/3/2011 2:01 AM, Frank Cefalu wrote: > > Not saying your tasks are easier or less stressful. > > But, I guess you can look at senior devs/leads as the architect of > the house, and your the house inspector. > > Get what I mean? Not saying one out weighs the other, just one is > more involved in architecture, and the other is involved in making > sure it meets city requirements aka business reqs. > > > ---- > *Frank Cefalu* > > > > On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 9:21 PM, David Krings > wrote: > > On 4/2/2011 8:22 PM, Frank Cefalu wrote: > > You are wrong. The work of a qa analyst is alot simpler. > You don't need to do > any architecture based on traffic retention, judge > framework usage etc. > > > Not in my QA world.... > > > David > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -- Kristina Anderson PHP/MySQL/LAMP/AJAX Systems Analyst / Programmer / Consultant 646 247 4987 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From tedd.sperling at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 10:38:07 2011 From: tedd.sperling at gmail.com (tedd) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 10:38:07 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D977754.4030500@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> <4D975346.7020807@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D977754.4030500@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: At 3:21 PM -0400 4/2/11, Kristina Anderson wrote: >$100 an hour is great but in many cases, you're not even approaching >40 hours or even 20 hours a week in billings. Any programmer should >be good enough with math to see that consistent billing of 40 hours >per week and less time spent on marketing is the key to greater >monthly income. > >Kristina That's exactly right. Most of my projects are done a "cost for project" basis. Often I figure out how much time the project will take me and then I provide the client with a "project cost", which usually looks like a better deal for them because I *do* charge $100 per hour. For example, I'm current working on a project that if I spent all my time (100%) working on it I probably could have it done in two weeks. That would be $8K at $100 per hour. However, in this case (which is more often than not) I determined that the client can't be ready in that length of time -- they simply don't have the graphics, text, and money. So, I provide a quote saying I can finish the project within two months at cost of $10k. That gives them time to get things together and gives me room to fit their project in to my schedule. If they come back and negotiate, then I have $2k of wiggle room. However most of the time, clients jump at the "project cost" for they feel that two months is much longer than 100 hours so they are getting something additional. Realize that often it perception and flexibility that you sell, not programming. In any event, the arrangement presents a win-win situation -- and that's what you want. So, when the client has the money, I take 50% up-front and the remainder when the project is finished. It sounds reasonable to the client and works most of the time for me. Now, what I *also* do in these cases is to stay with the client until they get what they want. This conduct will provide me with favor, which results in more work from both the client and their friends. Word of mouth means a lot! Sometimes, this means spending up to 50% more time than expected without billing for extras. However, at some point, the client should come to a realization what the scope of the project was at the beginning and what it turned into. Most clients realize what "feature creep" is and you can come to a reasonable solution as to how to deal with it. If you run into an unreasonable client (rare), then it's best to take whatever was outstanding and walk away -- don't do the court thing. As for an unreasonable example, I had one client who offered to pay me $50 *per week* until the project was finished as he kept adding things as if this project was a software buffet. I walked and left the remaining 50% payment plus the 150% effort on the table. In this case, I made $33 per hour on a failed project. Not good, but not so bad either. The bottom line is to determine what the client wants and work their needs to your advantage. It may sound like you're taking advantage of them, but clients seldom understand and often underestimate what you do and that is taking advantage of you. In the end, work the system to provide quality service for reasonable pay. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ From tedd.sperling at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 10:43:59 2011 From: tedd.sperling at gmail.com (tedd) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 10:43:59 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com><4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A 14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: At 3:32 PM -0400 4/2/11, Michele Waldman wrote: >In '99, I was making $70-85/hr as an Oracle/C Programmer. > >The interesting thing is how much more you have to know to be a web >developer, especially if you work on the front end and the backend. > >Know more, less money. > >Michele Know more, less money. <-- not necessarily. "Knowing more" simply means "more opportunity". I have had many clients who come to me wanting a simple billboard -- I can do that. I typically charge $1k for a three page web site and can create a decent looking one in a day. I'll do that as often as anyone wants. I know people who charge considerably more and remarkably less. So, there's no "rule of thumb" -- so surmise the client, determine your own worth, and charge accordingly. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ From tedd.sperling at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 10:46:11 2011 From: tedd.sperling at gmail.com (tedd) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 10:46:11 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com><4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A 14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> Message-ID: At 6:59 PM -0400 4/2/11, David Krings wrote: >On 4/2/2011 3:32 PM, Michele Waldman wrote: >>In '99, I was making $70-85/hr as an Oracle/C Programmer. > >Interesting discussion, but what baffles me beyond repair is how >much more developers are paid compared to QA or support staff. The >difficulty of work is about the same, although for a support job I >think it is even higher (think about it, the supporters have to >defend what the developers goofed up). The skill set is somewhat >different, but thinking about what I get as a veteran QA Analyst and >the hourly rates you are discussing makes me just wanna cry. OK, in >all fairness, I'm not working in City, but upstate. Still, I think >that if you can steadily land jobs that pay 50$ an hour you are >doing quite well. > >David Not meaning to degrade "Support", but those positions as usually the first step in IT -- are they not? As such, it's like minimum wage with higher wages as they move up. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ From tedd.sperling at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 10:49:09 2011 From: tedd.sperling at gmail.com (tedd) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 10:49:09 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <4D9855B2.1050308@kacomputerconsulting.com> References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D97AA3E.8040704@gmx.net> <4D97CBB6.7040708@gmx.net> <4D9855B2.1050308@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: At 7:10 AM -0400 4/3/11, Kristina Anderson wrote: >This poo poo stew then gets dumped into the lap of our hapless "QA >Analyst" who is expected to work a miracle on par with parting the >Red Sea by turning it into Tasty Texas Chili for distribution to the >masses. Kristina: "poo poo" -- this technical jargon is making my head hurt. :-) Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ From ramons at gmx.net Sun Apr 3 11:01:03 2011 From: ramons at gmx.net (David Krings) Date: Sun, 03 Apr 2011 11:01:03 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: <9478430.4.1301839279110.JavaMail.root@mail.twoguyshosting.com> References: <9478430.4.1301839279110.JavaMail.root@mail.twoguyshosting.com> Message-ID: <4D988BAF.4040908@gmx.net> On 4/3/2011 10:01 AM, Donald J. Organ IV wrote: > So what your saying is after your QS person finds issues, they go into the > code/design and fix it themselves?? Been there, done that and was important, because shortly after the developers got laid off and knowing how to fix things was very helpful in supporting the product. But QA people must have sufficient development skills, at least enough to know when the developers are just being lazy. How many times have I heard "this will take three weeks" just to have it get done in half an hour after insisting on a fix (because I knew it wasn't rocket science to fix it). Or the whiny "this cannot be done in X" with X being any programming language used for a project. Of course it can be done! The dev was just too lazy to google for the code snippet or look at the other places in the app where the exact same functionality exists and works flawlessly. Many bright minds pointed out in the past that QA must own the design and requirements, because they are the ones who know best when it is stupid, won't work, or isn't worth the effort. I'm not knocking the developers in general. Many I work and worked with have excellent skills and a superb understanding of the business, but - understandably so - are not keen on tedious work such as bug fixing, writing tech docs, or analyzing requirements. Some tend to code whatever they are asked to code, even if they know it is dumb. That is why smart businesses outsource coding work to Russia, Hungary or Bulgaria. Sure, the developers there are not as cheap as the ones in India, but they tend to ask the tough questions. As for QA, QA is nothing more than a mirror developers have to look into. David From ereyes at totalcreations.com Sun Apr 3 12:22:44 2011 From: ereyes at totalcreations.com (Edgar Reyes) Date: Sun, 03 Apr 2011 12:22:44 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? In-Reply-To: References: <4D96D2AD.9080806@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4F067DF4272545C781C79E6013C17A14@MainTop> <4D974CBA.1010200@kacomputerconsulting.com> <8021499067154FD7A0A795D9D3D679E0@MainTop> <4D975346.7020807@kacomputerconsulting.com> <4D977754.4030500@kacomputerconsulting.com> Message-ID: <72D41F3AC8924389A7BB70E29F077746@MainTop> Ted you hit the nail on the head, that's pretty much exactly what I do. ER -----Original Message----- From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On Behalf Of tedd Sent: Sunday, April 03, 2011 10:38 AM To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? At 3:21 PM -0400 4/2/11, Kristina Anderson wrote: >$100 an hour is great but in many cases, you're not even approaching >40 hours or even 20 hours a week in billings. Any programmer should >be good enough with math to see that consistent billing of 40 hours >per week and less time spent on marketing is the key to greater >monthly income. > >Kristina That's exactly right. Most of my projects are done a "cost for project" basis. Often I figure out how much time the project will take me and then I provide the client with a "project cost", which usually looks like a better deal for them because I *do* charge $100 per hour. For example, I'm current working on a project that if I spent all my time (100%) working on it I probably could have it done in two weeks. That would be $8K at $100 per hour. However, in this case (which is more often than not) I determined that the client can't be ready in that length of time -- they simply don't have the graphics, text, and money. So, I provide a quote saying I can finish the project within two months at cost of $10k. That gives them time to get things together and gives me room to fit their project in to my schedule. If they come back and negotiate, then I have $2k of wiggle room. However most of the time, clients jump at the "project cost" for they feel that two months is much longer than 100 hours so they are getting something additional. Realize that often it perception and flexibility that you sell, not programming. In any event, the arrangement presents a win-win situation -- and that's what you want. So, when the client has the money, I take 50% up-front and the remainder when the project is finished. It sounds reasonable to the client and works most of the time for me. Now, what I *also* do in these cases is to stay with the client until they get what they want. This conduct will provide me with favor, which results in more work from both the client and their friends. Word of mouth means a lot! Sometimes, this means spending up to 50% more time than expected without billing for extras. However, at some point, the client should come to a realization what the scope of the project was at the beginning and what it turned into. Most clients realize what "feature creep" is and you can come to a reasonable solution as to how to deal with it. If you run into an unreasonable client (rare), then it's best to take whatever was outstanding and walk away -- don't do the court thing. As for an unreasonable example, I had one client who offered to pay me $50 *per week* until the project was finished as he kept adding things as if this project was a software buffet. I walked and left the remaining 50% payment plus the 150% effort on the table. In this case, I made $33 per hour on a failed project. Not good, but not so bad either. The bottom line is to determine what the client wants and work their needs to your advantage. It may sound like you're taking advantage of them, but clients seldom understand and often underestimate what you do and that is taking advantage of you. In the end, work the system to provide quality service for reasonable pay. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From ioplex at gmail.com Sun Apr 3 23:30:01 2011 From: ioplex at gmail.com (Michael B Allen) Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 23:30:01 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 3:55 PM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > So since the topic of what to charge per hour seems to be being > vigoriously discussed, I thought I'd throw something out there that's > bugged me for a while. > > How to price a PHP product. > > I'm starting my third PHP product (an appointment reminder for a > software system I wrote) and I'm having a lot of problems coming up > with a price. I don't want to set it too low, like I seem to have done > with my rates, but I don't want to over price it either. > > The system is straight PHP, JavaScript, JQuery, and HTML, so it's not > anything terribly complex but it does provider a nice extension to the > existing software. > > What is the best way to price such software? Hi Anthony, This is impossible to answer without intimate knowledge of the product (and I apologize in advance for saying I don't care to know). But if the M/O of the product is your typical business application running as an HTTP service accessed by potentially many clients, then the low end would probably be around $500 USD. That's about what it takes to cover the costs of just helping people get setup and collecting payment. If the product is a little side component like a plugin for something then you might make it less but your margins in this case are going to be poor. If you're app is something small and you're thinking about a price like $100 or less, don't waste your time. You need to write something that is useful enough to reach that $500 range. If the application is really good and solves an important business need, it is not unreasonable to charge $10,000 or an annual fee of $1500 or so (but my guess is that you're not in this upper range because it would probably be something that requires a significant amount of man hours in which case you would have one product and not three). Again it really depends a lot on what the product does and how well it does it. If your software is really good at something, customers will gladly buy it and they will not care much if it's $200 or $500. Most developers / operators are not paying for this stuff themselves. They're just doing an evaluation and submitting a purchase order. You have to get to about $1000 before someone is going to ask "why?". And of course customers are going to expect a trial package that doesn't cost anything. And customers demand options. You must have a trial version that costs $0. And even after the trial expires I recommend leaving that installation functional in some limited way. Of course you can also have a version limited to a certain number of users say for $300 as opposed to a "platinum" version for $600 or whatever. I provide a lot of pricing options. I have a separate "confidential" document for each product that I attach to every sales email query which describes all of the pricing options about discounts, the cost of versions limited to a certain number of users, reseller conditions and so on. You can make a lot more money if the options are structured well. For example, I have a simple formula (and corresponding easy to read price table) that increases the discount as the number of installations goes up. I think this scheme alone has accounted for significantly larger invoice prices. Another thing you can do is to make the debut price less than the ultimate target price to leave room for increases. After a few months when you have a better idea of who the customer's are, what they want and the product has matured a little, you can decide to go higher depending on the software's popularity, the economy, etc. Then when you do a major revision 2 years later maybe you increase again. Good luck, Mike From matt at atopia.net Sun Apr 3 23:37:04 2011 From: matt at atopia.net (Matt Juszczak) Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2011 03:37:04 +0000 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <93404118-1301888225-cardhu_decombobulator_blackberry.rim.net-2062871935-@bda205.bisx.prod.on.blackberry> To sum up my response to Mike, this is why I'm a big believer in Software as a Service (SaaS). Built it once, sell to many. -----Original Message----- From: Michael B Allen Sender: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 23:30:01 To: NYPHP Talk Reply-To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 3:55 PM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > So since the topic of what to charge per hour seems to be being > vigoriously discussed, I thought I'd throw something out there that's > bugged me for a while. > > How to price a PHP product. > > I'm starting my third PHP product (an appointment reminder for a > software system I wrote) and I'm having a lot of problems coming up > with a price. I don't want to set it too low, like I seem to have done > with my rates, but I don't want to over price it either. > > The system is straight PHP, JavaScript, JQuery, and HTML, so it's not > anything terribly complex but it does provider a nice extension to the > existing software. > > What is the best way to price such software? Hi Anthony, This is impossible to answer without intimate knowledge of the product (and I apologize in advance for saying I don't care to know). But if the M/O of the product is your typical business application running as an HTTP service accessed by potentially many clients, then the low end would probably be around $500 USD. That's about what it takes to cover the costs of just helping people get setup and collecting payment. If the product is a little side component like a plugin for something then you might make it less but your margins in this case are going to be poor. If you're app is something small and you're thinking about a price like $100 or less, don't waste your time. You need to write something that is useful enough to reach that $500 range. If the application is really good and solves an important business need, it is not unreasonable to charge $10,000 or an annual fee of $1500 or so (but my guess is that you're not in this upper range because it would probably be something that requires a significant amount of man hours in which case you would have one product and not three). Again it really depends a lot on what the product does and how well it does it. If your software is really good at something, customers will gladly buy it and they will not care much if it's $200 or $500. Most developers / operators are not paying for this stuff themselves. They're just doing an evaluation and submitting a purchase order. You have to get to about $1000 before someone is going to ask "why?". And of course customers are going to expect a trial package that doesn't cost anything. And customers demand options. You must have a trial version that costs $0. And even after the trial expires I recommend leaving that installation functional in some limited way. Of course you can also have a version limited to a certain number of users say for $300 as opposed to a "platinum" version for $600 or whatever. I provide a lot of pricing options. I have a separate "confidential" document for each product that I attach to every sales email query which describes all of the pricing options about discounts, the cost of versions limited to a certain number of users, reseller conditions and so on. You can make a lot more money if the options are structured well. For example, I have a simple formula (and corresponding easy to read price table) that increases the discount as the number of installations goes up. I think this scheme alone has accounted for significantly larger invoice prices. Another thing you can do is to make the debut price less than the ultimate target price to leave room for increases. After a few months when you have a better idea of who the customer's are, what they want and the product has matured a little, you can decide to go higher depending on the software's popularity, the economy, etc. Then when you do a major revision 2 years later maybe you increase again. Good luck, Mike _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation From kahlil_haynes at hotmail.com Mon Apr 4 13:55:14 2011 From: kahlil_haynes at hotmail.com (Kahlil Haynes) Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2011 13:55:14 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Project pricing In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Aren't some of you breaking the law by suggesting actual amounts to charge for specific work? From: talk-request at lists.nyphp.org Subject: talk Digest, Vol 54, Issue 9 To: talk at lists.nyphp.org Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2011 12:00:01 -0400 Send talk mailing list submissions to talk at lists.nyphp.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to talk-request at lists.nyphp.org You can reach the person managing the list at talk-owner at lists.nyphp.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of talk digest..." --Forwarded Message Attachment-- From: ereyes at totalcreations.com To: talk at lists.nyphp.org Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 12:22:44 -0400 Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? Ted you hit the nail on the head, that's pretty much exactly what I do. ER -----Original Message----- From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org] On Behalf Of tedd Sent: Sunday, April 03, 2011 10:38 AM To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] How much is a site redesign worth? At 3:21 PM -0400 4/2/11, Kristina Anderson wrote: >$100 an hour is great but in many cases, you're not even approaching >40 hours or even 20 hours a week in billings. Any programmer should >be good enough with math to see that consistent billing of 40 hours >per week and less time spent on marketing is the key to greater >monthly income. > >Kristina That's exactly right. Most of my projects are done a "cost for project" basis. Often I figure out how much time the project will take me and then I provide the client with a "project cost", which usually looks like a better deal for them because I *do* charge $100 per hour. For example, I'm current working on a project that if I spent all my time (100%) working on it I probably could have it done in two weeks. That would be $8K at $100 per hour. However, in this case (which is more often than not) I determined that the client can't be ready in that length of time -- they simply don't have the graphics, text, and money. So, I provide a quote saying I can finish the project within two months at cost of $10k. That gives them time to get things together and gives me room to fit their project in to my schedule. If they come back and negotiate, then I have $2k of wiggle room. However most of the time, clients jump at the "project cost" for they feel that two months is much longer than 100 hours so they are getting something additional. Realize that often it perception and flexibility that you sell, not programming. In any event, the arrangement presents a win-win situation -- and that's what you want. So, when the client has the money, I take 50% up-front and the remainder when the project is finished. It sounds reasonable to the client and works most of the time for me. Now, what I *also* do in these cases is to stay with the client until they get what they want. This conduct will provide me with favor, which results in more work from both the client and their friends. Word of mouth means a lot! Sometimes, this means spending up to 50% more time than expected without billing for extras. However, at some point, the client should come to a realization what the scope of the project was at the beginning and what it turned into. Most clients realize what "feature creep" is and you can come to a reasonable solution as to how to deal with it. If you run into an unreasonable client (rare), then it's best to take whatever was outstanding and walk away -- don't do the court thing. As for an unreasonable example, I had one client who offered to pay me $50 *per week* until the project was finished as he kept adding things as if this project was a software buffet. I walked and left the remaining 50% payment plus the 150% effort on the table. In this case, I made $33 per hour on a failed project. Not good, but not so bad either. The bottom line is to determine what the client wants and work their needs to your advantage. It may sound like you're taking advantage of them, but clients seldom understand and often underestimate what you do and that is taking advantage of you. In the end, work the system to provide quality service for reasonable pay. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation --Forwarded Message Attachment-- From: ioplex at gmail.com To: talk at lists.nyphp.org Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 23:30:01 -0400 Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 3:55 PM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > So since the topic of what to charge per hour seems to be being > vigoriously discussed, I thought I'd throw something out there that's > bugged me for a while. > > How to price a PHP product. > > I'm starting my third PHP product (an appointment reminder for a > software system I wrote) and I'm having a lot of problems coming up > with a price. I don't want to set it too low, like I seem to have done > with my rates, but I don't want to over price it either. > > The system is straight PHP, JavaScript, JQuery, and HTML, so it's not > anything terribly complex but it does provider a nice extension to the > existing software. > > What is the best way to price such software? Hi Anthony, This is impossible to answer without intimate knowledge of the product (and I apologize in advance for saying I don't care to know). But if the M/O of the product is your typical business application running as an HTTP service accessed by potentially many clients, then the low end would probably be around $500 USD. That's about what it takes to cover the costs of just helping people get setup and collecting payment. If the product is a little side component like a plugin for something then you might make it less but your margins in this case are going to be poor. If you're app is something small and you're thinking about a price like $100 or less, don't waste your time. You need to write something that is useful enough to reach that $500 range. If the application is really good and solves an important business need, it is not unreasonable to charge $10,000 or an annual fee of $1500 or so (but my guess is that you're not in this upper range because it would probably be something that requires a significant amount of man hours in which case you would have one product and not three). Again it really depends a lot on what the product does and how well it does it. If your software is really good at something, customers will gladly buy it and they will not care much if it's $200 or $500. Most developers / operators are not paying for this stuff themselves. They're just doing an evaluation and submitting a purchase order. You have to get to about $1000 before someone is going to ask "why?". And of course customers are going to expect a trial package that doesn't cost anything. And customers demand options. You must have a trial version that costs $0. And even after the trial expires I recommend leaving that installation functional in some limited way. Of course you can also have a version limited to a certain number of users say for $300 as opposed to a "platinum" version for $600 or whatever. I provide a lot of pricing options. I have a separate "confidential" document for each product that I attach to every sales email query which describes all of the pricing options about discounts, the cost of versions limited to a certain number of users, reseller conditions and so on. You can make a lot more money if the options are structured well. For example, I have a simple formula (and corresponding easy to read price table) that increases the discount as the number of installations goes up. I think this scheme alone has accounted for significantly larger invoice prices. Another thing you can do is to make the debut price less than the ultimate target price to leave room for increases. After a few months when you have a better idea of who the customer's are, what they want and the product has matured a little, you can decide to go higher depending on the software's popularity, the economy, etc. Then when you do a major revision 2 years later maybe you increase again. Good luck, Mike --Forwarded Message Attachment-- From: matt at atopia.net To: talk at lists.nyphp.org Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2011 03:37:04 +0000 Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product To sum up my response to Mike, this is why I'm a big believer in Software as a Service (SaaS). Built it once, sell to many. -----Original Message----- From: Michael B Allen Sender: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2011 23:30:01 To: NYPHP Talk Reply-To: NYPHP Talk Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] Pricing a PHP product On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 3:55 PM, Anthony Papillion wrote: > So since the topic of what to charge per hour seems to be being > vigoriously discussed, I thought I'd throw something out there that's > bugged me for a while. > > How to price a PHP product. > > I'm starting my third PHP product (an appointment reminder for a > software system I wrote) and I'm having a lot of problems coming up > with a price. I don't want to set it too low, like I seem to have done > with my rates, but I don't want to over price it either. > > The system is straight PHP, JavaScript, JQuery, and HTML, so it's not > anything terribly complex but it does provider a nice extension to the > existing software. > > What is the best way to price such software? Hi Anthony, This is impossible to answer without intimate knowledge of the product (and I apologize in advance for saying I don't care to know). But if the M/O of the product is your typical business application running as an HTTP service accessed by potentially many clients, then the low end would probably be around $500 USD. That's about what it takes to cover the costs of just helping people get setup and collecting payment. If the product is a little side component like a plugin for something then you might make it less but your margins in this case are going to be poor. If you're app is something small and you're thinking about a price like $100 or less, don't waste your time. You need to write something that is useful enough to reach that $500 range. If the application is really good and solves an important business need, it is not unreasonable to charge $10,000 or an annual fee of $1500 or so (but my guess is that you're not in this upper range because it would probably be something that requires a significant amount of man hours in which case you would have one product and not three). Again it really depends a lot on what the product does and how well it does it. If your software is really good at something, customers will gladly buy it and they will not care much if it's $200 or $500. Most developers / operators are not paying for this stuff themselves. They're just doing an evaluation and submitting a purchase order. You have to get to about $1000 before someone is going to ask "why?". And of course customers are going to expect a trial package that doesn't cost anything. And customers demand options. You must have a trial version that costs $0. And even after the trial expires I recommend leaving that installation functional in some limited way. Of course you can also have a version limited to a certain number of users say for $300 as opposed to a "platinum" version for $600 or whatever. I provide a lot of pricing options. I have a separate "confidential" document for each product that I attach to every sales email query which describes all of the pricing options about discounts, the cost of versions limited to a certain number of users, reseller conditions and so on. You can make a lot more money if the options are structured well. For example, I have a simple formula (and corresponding easy to read price table) that increases the discount as the number of installations goes up. I think this scheme alone has accounted for significantly larger invoice prices. Another thing you can do is to make the debut price less than the ultimate target price to leave room for increases. After a few months when you have a better idea of who the customer's are, what they want and the product has matured a little, you can decide to go higher depending on the software's popularity, the economy, etc. Then when you do a major revision 2 years later maybe you increase again. Good luck, Mike _______________________________________________ New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From tedd.sperling at gmail.com Mon Apr 4 14:19:16 2011 From: tedd.sperling at gmail.com (tedd) Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2011 14:19:16 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Project pricing In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: At 1:55 PM -0400 4/4/11, Kahlil Haynes wrote: >Aren't some of you breaking the law by suggesting actual amounts to >charge for specific work? Are you kidding me? What you are referring to is "Price Fixing". That is when like-service companies (i.e., Airlines) call each other and determine a basic set rate instead of letting competition determine the price. That is not what we are doing here! You are free to charge whatever you want -- I don't care. No one is agreeing to a set-price for set-labor PERIOD. I'll let the Congress do that in determining minimum wage -- they seem to break every other law. Now, if the government wants to shut me up about what I charge, then they are free to try. But they have to figure out how to get around the first amendment, which supports my right to free speech. That's bigger than them. As far as I'm concerned, the government can take a long walk off a short pier. Besides, regardless of who they think they are, they haven't done anything to promote business, nor do they know how. They are just a bunch of clowns throwing our money at their ideas. Sorry for the rant. :-) So, the answer is "No" we are not breaking any law taking about our experiences with clients. Cheers, tedd -- ------- http://sperling.com/ From ka at kacomputerconsulting.com Mon Apr 4 16:46:02 2011 From: ka at kacomputerconsulting.com (Kristina Anderson) Date: Mon, 04 Apr 2011 16:46:02 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Project pricing In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4D9A2E0A.8080004@kacomputerconsulting.com> On 4/4/2011 2:19 PM, tedd wrote: > At 1:55 PM -0400 4/4/11, Kahlil Haynes wrote: >> Aren't some of you breaking the law by suggesting actual amounts to >> charge for specific work? > > Are you kidding me? > > What you are referring to is "Price Fixing". That is when like-service > companies (i.e., Airlines) call each other and determine a basic set > rate instead of letting competition determine the price. > > That is not what we are doing here! You are free to charge whatever > you want -- I don't care. No one is agreeing to a set-price for > set-labor PERIOD. I'll let the Congress do that in determining minimum > wage -- they seem to break every other law. > > Now, if the government wants to shut me up about what I charge, then > they are free to try. But they have to figure out how to get around > the first amendment, which supports my right to free speech. That's > bigger than them. > > As far as I'm concerned, the government can take a long walk off a > short pier. Besides, regardless of who they think they are, they > haven't done anything to promote business, nor do they know how. They > are just a bunch of clowns throwing our money at their ideas. > > Sorry for the rant. :-) > > So, the answer is "No" we are not breaking any law taking about our > experiences with clients. > > Cheers, > > tedd > The fact that someone is even worried that what we do here is "breaking the law" is indicative of our giant leap as a society towards total fascism and paranoia. When it becomes illegal to wear cheesy t-shirts with penguins on them, or eat cold pizza before noon...then we might have a problem here. Kristina From garyamort at gmail.com Thu Apr 7 17:38:10 2011 From: garyamort at gmail.com (Gary Mort) Date: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 17:38:10 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Writing daemons in PHP Message-ID: <4D9E2EC2.6090007@gmail.com> Just wondering what, in general, others are using for writing daemons in PHP. Just code it directly using libevent... or using a framework such as phpdaemon, https://github.com/kakserpom/phpdaemon For a first pass, I need to set up a more intelligent CPULimit app to meet my specific goals. Since all CPULimit basically does is check all the PID's every 2ms and send out kill to processes with SIGSTOP and SIGCONT - it seems simple to do the same with PHP. Just loop through every 2 ms and when cpu usage is over the threshold, do some quick calcs to determine how many microseconds before the processes can be continued in order to drop the cpu usage below the threshold and use libevent to set the callback time. Granted, this is supposedly "better" to program in C rather than PHP, but since I want to be able to do quick changes and keep the learning curve small, I'd rather do it in PHP until everything has been tweaked and perfected. Then it's always an option to try using HipHop to convert it.... or if it is running well and doing what is needed, leave it be. From anthony at tinkertownlabs.com Fri Apr 8 20:34:18 2011 From: anthony at tinkertownlabs.com (Anthony Wlodarski) Date: Fri, 08 Apr 2011 20:34:18 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Writing daemons in PHP In-Reply-To: <4D9E2EC2.6090007@gmail.com> References: <4D9E2EC2.6090007@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4D9FA98A.5060805@tinkertownlabs.com> I don't have knowledge or expertise in this area but I have written a few things in node.js and using upstart to control the jobs. However doing my own research on how to write a daemon in PHP you should check out http://simas.posterous.com/writing-a-php-daemon-application. -Anthony On 04/07/2011 05:38 PM, Gary Mort wrote: > Just wondering what, in general, others are using for writing daemons in > PHP. > > Just code it directly using libevent... or using a framework such as > phpdaemon, https://github.com/kakserpom/phpdaemon > > > For a first pass, I need to set up a more intelligent CPULimit app to > meet my specific goals. Since all CPULimit basically does is check all > the PID's every 2ms and send out kill to processes with SIGSTOP and > SIGCONT - it seems simple to do the same with PHP. > > Just loop through every 2 ms and when cpu usage is over the threshold, > do some quick calcs to determine how many microseconds before the > processes can be continued in order to drop the cpu usage below the > threshold and use libevent to set the callback time. > > Granted, this is supposedly "better" to program in C rather than PHP, > but since I want to be able to do quick changes and keep the learning > curve small, I'd rather do it in PHP until everything has been tweaked > and perfected. Then it's always an option to try using HipHop to > convert it.... or if it is running well and doing what is needed, leave > it be. > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation -- Anthony Wlodarski Lead Software Engineer Get2Know.me 646 285 0500 x217 From rolan at omnistep.com Sat Apr 9 17:44:55 2011 From: rolan at omnistep.com (Rolan Yang) Date: Sat, 09 Apr 2011 17:44:55 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Writing daemons in PHP In-Reply-To: <4D9E2EC2.6090007@gmail.com> References: <4D9E2EC2.6090007@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4DA0D357.30508@omnistep.com> I use this: http://pear.php.net/package/System_Daemon and it's worked flawlessly for the past 2 years. ~Rolan On 4/7/2011 5:38 PM, Gary Mort wrote: > Just wondering what, in general, others are using for writing daemons in > PHP. > > Just code it directly using libevent... or using a framework such as > phpdaemon, https://github.com/kakserpom/phpdaemon > > > For a first pass, I need to set up a more intelligent CPULimit app to > meet my specific goals. Since all CPULimit basically does is check all > the PID's every 2ms and send out kill to processes with SIGSTOP and > SIGCONT - it seems simple to do the same with PHP. > > Just loop through every 2 ms and when cpu usage is over the threshold, > do some quick calcs to determine how many microseconds before the > processes can be continued in order to drop the cpu usage below the > threshold and use libevent to set the callback time. > > Granted, this is supposedly "better" to program in C rather than PHP, > but since I want to be able to do quick changes and keep the learning > curve small, I'd rather do it in PHP until everything has been tweaked > and perfected. Then it's always an option to try using HipHop to > convert it.... or if it is running well and doing what is needed, leave > it be. > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From guilhermeblanco at gmail.com Sat Apr 9 19:25:19 2011 From: guilhermeblanco at gmail.com (guilhermeblanco at gmail.com) Date: Sat, 9 Apr 2011 20:25:19 -0300 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Writing daemons in PHP In-Reply-To: <4DA0D357.30508@omnistep.com> References: <4D9E2EC2.6090007@gmail.com> <4DA0D357.30508@omnistep.com> Message-ID: You should look at Gearman project for PHP. =) http://php.net/manual/en/book.gearman.php http://www.phpclasses.org/blog/post/108-Distributing-PHP-processing-with-Gearman.html http://www.slideshare.net/felixdv/high-gear-php-with-gearman http://weierophinney.net/matthew/archives/240-Writing-Gearman-Workers-in-PHP.html Cheers, On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 6:44 PM, Rolan Yang wrote: > I use this: > > http://pear.php.net/package/System_Daemon > > and it's worked flawlessly for the past 2 years. > > ~Rolan > > On 4/7/2011 5:38 PM, Gary Mort wrote: >> >> Just wondering what, in general, others are using for writing daemons in >> PHP. >> >> Just code it directly using libevent... ? or using a framework such as >> phpdaemon, https://github.com/kakserpom/phpdaemon >> >> >> For a first pass, I need to set up a more intelligent CPULimit app to >> meet my specific goals. ?Since all CPULimit basically does is check all >> the PID's every 2ms and send out kill to processes with SIGSTOP and >> SIGCONT - it seems simple to do the same with PHP. >> >> Just loop through every 2 ms and when cpu usage is over the threshold, >> do some quick calcs to determine how many microseconds before the >> processes can be continued in order to drop the cpu usage below the >> threshold and use libevent to set the callback time. >> >> Granted, this is supposedly "better" to program in C rather than PHP, >> but since I want to be able to do quick changes and keep the learning >> curve small, I'd rather do it in PHP until everything has been tweaked >> and perfected. ?Then it's always an option to try using HipHop to >> convert it.... or if it is running well and doing what is needed, leave >> it be. >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > -- Guilherme Blanco Mobile: +55 (16) 9215-8480 MSN: guilhermeblanco at hotmail.com S?o Paulo - SP/Brazil From bulk at zaunere.com Wed Apr 13 16:53:59 2011 From: bulk at zaunere.com (Hans Zaunere) Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 16:53:59 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Call for Presentation Message-ID: <00ac01cbfa1c$ea446410$becd2c30$@zaunere.com> Hi all, We're looking for a presentation for our General NYPHP Meeting (occurring April 26th at 6:30pm at IBM). NYPHP general meetings are: -- technical, non-sales, developer orientated -- review of interesting technology, techniques, etc. Thanks, H From john at coggeshall.org Wed Apr 13 17:23:56 2011 From: john at coggeshall.org (John Coggeshall) Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 17:23:56 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Call for Presentation In-Reply-To: <00ac01cbfa1c$ea446410$becd2c30$@zaunere.com> References: <00ac01cbfa1c$ea446410$becd2c30$@zaunere.com> Message-ID: Hans: I'll be in town the 26th, if you still are looking for a speaker... I'm sure I can find something interesting to talk about :) John On Wed, Apr 13, 2011 at 4:53 PM, Hans Zaunere wrote: > Hi all, > > We're looking for a presentation for our General NYPHP Meeting (occurring > April 26th at 6:30pm at IBM). > > NYPHP general meetings are: > > -- technical, non-sales, developer orientated > > -- review of interesting technology, techniques, etc. > > Thanks, > > H > > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation > From bulk at zaunere.com Wed Apr 13 17:30:33 2011 From: bulk at zaunere.com (Hans Zaunere) Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 17:30:33 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Call for Presentation In-Reply-To: References: <00ac01cbfa1c$ea446410$becd2c30$@zaunere.com> Message-ID: <00cb01cbfa22$05ab1000$11013000$@zaunere.com> > I'll be in town the 26th, if you still are looking for a speaker... > I'm sure I can find something interesting to talk about :) Sounds good to me - John, shoot me a blurb and optional bio to me off-list and I'll get you locked in - first come first serve. H From nelly at cgim.com Mon Apr 18 17:09:25 2011 From: nelly at cgim.com (Nelly Yusupova) Date: Mon, 18 Apr 2011 17:09:25 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] Looking for CakePHP developer Message-ID: Hello Everyone, I am looking for a CakePHP developer for a short project which can turn into something bigger. If you qualify, please contact me at nelly at cgim.com with the following info: 1. Your name & contact info 2. Your experience with cake php & projects that you?ve worked on 3. Links to your portfolio or projects that you worked on 4. Your rates Thank you in advance! Sincerely, Nelly Yusupova Digitalwoman.com nelly at digitalwoman.com 917 603-9226 (phone) URL: http://www.digitalwoman.com Blog: http://www.webgrrls.com/blog/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/DigitalWoman -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From phprocks at dynamicink.com Sat Apr 30 15:36:08 2011 From: phprocks at dynamicink.com (PHP Rocks) Date: Sat, 30 Apr 2011 15:36:08 -0400 Subject: [nycphp-talk] New York's first MySQL conference! Message-ID: *Discover the Power of MySQL.* Percona Live MySQL Conference NYC is an intensive one-day MySQL summit. Speakers include Percona consultants and invited guests. The topics are 100% technical. - Learn what works from leading companies who use MySQL. - Hear how new solutions help companies drive down costs and improve performance. - Discuss your unique challenges and hear new possibilities. - Meet face-to-face in the "hallway track" and make lasting connections. - Engage the best and brightest in a lively job market. *Register at http://percona-live-new-york-city.eventbrite.com* At Percona Live, you'll benefit from the expertise of the most accomplished system architects and developers in the business. You'll see how to tackle your old problems in a whole new way. Full schedule, information and list of speakers at the official event site http://www.percona.com/live/nyc-2011 Sponsored by the Vork Enterprise Framework ( http://www.Vork.us) for PHP and other exceptional organizations. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: