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$400/hour sounds expensive to anybody. But $32,000 might be cheap as far as project budgets go.

I think the use cases you describe are very different from most of us. You said you could spend upto 3 days just working on a proposal. For some of us, 3 days of billed work with one client is the average size of a complete project. Can you see then how it may not be efficient to spend a day just working on a proposal and spec'ing things?

Like you, I always believed that as a client you pay me to achieve objectives--not hit keystrokes on my keyboard. In the past two months, I've refunded or canceled three fixed-price projects where it was simply cheaper for me to end it than proceed. One of them involved over 40 hours of work when my initial estimate was that it would be a 20 hour project. I refunded the guy's original deposit.

It's easy to say that I am just underquoting. But no matter what quote I give, I feel it's rather arbitrary given I cannot invest time like you to really delve deep into the project and get a real sense of the work involved. I have gone the whole "I am not going to underquote" route and after doing that for a sample set of projects, my post-martem revealed that I was either overbilling or underbilling clients. In essence I had some clients subsidizing the other clients.

This past week I've been working on my first "by the hour" gig. I've put in over 80 hours in the last 10 days. It's been a living hell for me work-wise. But at least I know I'll be compensated for it! And fairly! There was no way I could quote this client a flat fee and c



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