child of wonder
Diamond Member
- Aug 31, 2006
- 8,307
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Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
How much were you charging while you were a student? I've got nothing against helping someone out, but you need to charge what the market says you should be charging.Originally posted by: child of wonder
I'm in this situation, too. I do consulting work for a small company and only charge $35/hour for my work. The reason I charge so low is because the owner of this company hired me on while I was going to school so I was getting great experience and income while I got my degree and I really feel it helped propel me into the success I have today.
But they've been getting cheap IT consulting from me for over 3 years now. I think it's time to starting paying the piper.
I was charging $25/hour while I was a student. Given my experience and knowledge at the time that was a fair rate.
Now I've been out of school for two years and have been a Linux Sys Admin during that time. I'm going to start charging $50+ soon.
These are all the things I do for them:
1. Maintaining and administering two Linux servers running Postfix with a MySQL backend, Samba, Apache2, DNS, DHCP, Cacti, software RAID, plus an IPCop router with VPN access set up.
2. Performing nightly, automated offsite backups of all the company data to a NAS at my house using rsync tunneled through SSH.
3. Performing all PC maintenance such as reloading and imaging new machines, reloading infected machines, updates, and fixing all major and minor issues with no more than 8 hours response time (if I'm at my FT job).
4. Answering any and all computer related questions ("how do I do this in Office?" etc).
5. Maintaining a IP based security camera and writing scripts to ensure the motion sensing images it captures are cleared out after a month.
6. Anything else computer or network related.
When I last asked for a raise one of the people there called some local PC shops and got quotes for maintenance contracts (weekly backups, updates, fixing something if it breaks) and that was $50/hour so they feel I should get less since I don't have an office or employees. Plus, I'm in South Dakota so wages suck here.
I think the problem comes down to this: they aren't even certain of all the things I do because I keep everything running so smoothly. Everything was a mess when I first started there and now there may only be something wrong with the servers or network once or twice a year.
Anyway, sorry to hijack.
