by Ampersand » September 1st, 2012, 11:32 pm
Most freelance designers have a base per-hour rate, but they don't advertise it and rarely work by the hour. Instead, it's usually a matter of estimating how much time the job will take, then multiplying those estimated hours by the amount per hour that you'd like to make. Most clients, I've found, shy away from an open-ended per-hour amount and prefer to know up front the total they will be billed for the job. This, of course, means that you have to be good at estimating your time and also carefully defining the scope of the project in the contract.
And speaking of contracts, always put in the contract how much the client will be billed per hour for work above and beyond the scope of the project. For example, if the contract specifies that you'll present three logo concepts to the client, and he or she subsequently asks for a couple more, you can point to the contract and charge extra if the client really wants to see additional ideas.
As for what I or anybody else here charges, it would be sort of meaningless information to provide. The cost of living in the Bay Area, where you're from, is much higher than where I live, so you'd need to charge more than I would to make up for it.
