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Date: | Sat, 21 Feb 2009 16:10:26 -0500 |
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This is the most clear explanation I have read. Thank you. joan
On Feb 21, 2009, at 4:02 PM, Phillip Vogel wrote:
> My two cents on the subject:
>
> If a client needs my services as a freelancer, he will necessarily
> be paying a higher hourly rate than he would if he employed me full
> time. Note that I am not an illustrator, but the principals involved
> are pretty much the same.
>
> A client needs someone to configure a computer on his network. He
> can either:
>
> 1) pay me $125 per hour for my services
>
> 2) hire a full-time employee for $80,000 per year
>
> 3) try to do it himself, screw it up and then pay me $125 per hour
> to un-screw it.
>
> I am not asking him to pay me $250,000 for a year of full-time work,
> I am asking him for $125 per hour.
>
> Of course, the stock-house prices are a good place to start, but if
> the stock house had the illustration the client was looking for, he
> could just by it from Getty and be done with it. This client is
> looking for custom work and should either pay for it or hire a full-
> time illustrator to produce it at a lower hourly cost (leaving the
> client with the question of what to do with the illustrator the
> other 1990 hours of the work year).
>
> Phillip
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