DIY Builds
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Calculate Your Hourly Rate Business schools teach a standard formula for determining an hourly rate: Add up your labor and overhead costs, add the profit you want to earn, then divide the total by your hours worked. This is the minimum you must charge to pay your expenses, pay yourself a salary, and earn a profit.
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Choose a profit margin. You're also entitled to earn a profit over and above your salary and overhead expenses. Your salary does not count as profit; it's one of the costs of doing business. Profit is the reward you get for taking the risks of being in business for yourself. It also provides money to expand and develop your business. Profit is usually expressed as a percentage of total costs. There is no standard profit percentage, but a 10% to 20% profit is common. Determine billable hours. Finally, you need to determine how many hours you'll work and get paid for during the year. Assume you'll work a 40-hour week for purposes of this calculation, although you may end up working more than this. If you want to take a two-week vacation each year, you'll have a maximum of 2,000 billable hours per year (50 weeks x 40 hours). If you want to take a longer vacation, you'll have fewer billable hours. However, you'll probably spend at least 25% to 35% of your time on tasks that you can't bill to clients, such as bookkeeping and billing, drumming up business, and upgrading your skills. This means you'll probably have only 1,300 to 1,500 hours for which you can get paid each year, if you still want that two-week vacation.
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It's not enough to calculate how much you'd like to earn per hour: You also need to determine whether this figure is realistic. This means that you'll have to go out into the world and find out what other ICs are charging for similar services -- and what your potential clients are willing to pay. There are many ways to gather this information. Contact a professional organization or trade association for your field. It may be able to give you good information on what other ICs are charging in your area. Ask other ICs what they charge. You can communicate pricing concerns with other ICs over the Internet. Talk to potential clients and customers -- for example, attend trade shows and business conventions. You can find out what many companies pay employees who do work similar to yours on websites like www.salary.com, www.gassdoor.com, and www.payscale.com. You may discover that your ideal hourly rate is higher than what other ICs are charging in your area. However, if you're highly skilled and performing work of unusually high quality, don't be afraid to ask for more than other ICs with lesser skills charge. Lowballing your fees won't necessarily get you business. Many potential clients believe that they get what they pay for -- and are willing to pay more for quality. One approach is to start out charging a fee that is at the lower end of the spectrum for ICs performing similar services, then gradually increase it until you start meeting price resistance. Over time, you should be able to find a payment method and fee structure that enable you to get enough work while adequately compensating you for your services.
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