OT: How much to charge?

corug7 wrote on 1/28/2004, 7:56 AM
Looking for some input. I recently worked on a multi-cam shoot and since I'm new to freelancing, I'm not sure what a reasonable fee is. I was told I could charge anything "within reason." I work in a fairly big midwestern city (Grand Rapids, MI). Does $25.00 an hour sound reasonable, or should I charge a flat daily rate? I worked 7 hours.

Comments

AlanC wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:02 AM
You didn't mention what part you played in the shoot but I bet the tea boy was paid more than $25.00 an hour.

winrockpost wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:06 AM
..........I recently worked on a multi-cam shoot



doing what ? shooting, or editing.in either case 25 an hr is very, very, low,

Id like to think your skills warrant you as least as much as your plumber.

corug7 wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:13 AM
I worked as a camera operator. I also helped with teardown. Please keep in mind that I would like to be asked to work with these guys again. By the way, I try to do most of my own plumbing :).

Thanks for the replies!
corug7 wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:16 AM
By the way, if you are replying to this thread, please list the general region you work in and what you feel might be a reasonable amount in that area, and how long you have worked there. Thanks everyone.
videoman69 wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:21 AM
In Dallas most experienced Camera Ops will get between $300-$400 per
10 hour day.
DP's might get $700-$2000 per day
Gaffers $400-$600
Grips $250-$350
Sound $500-$700 (with equipment)
Make-Up $250-$500

Of course all these ranges are based on experience but as a producer
this is typically what I have paid.

MKS
winrockpost wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:48 AM
Charlotte NC
Videographers 350 per day (5.5 to 10 hours ) not including camera.
mini DV cam xl1, pd150 -- 200 per day
beta sp 500 per day
digi beta 650

plumber 75.00 per hr
Lanzaedit wrote on 1/28/2004, 8:56 AM
First I'll say that $50/hr is what I would expect to pay/recieve here in Middle Tennessee. Most freelancers work on a half-day/full day rate, so the $50/hr is just a rough average.

I'm surprised that you're negotiating pay after the fact.
I would expect the rate to be established beforehand, not after the job is done.

John
corug7 wrote on 1/28/2004, 9:03 AM
John,
Like I said, I'm new to the freelance business. I figured I'd get paid a flat rate, and when I was told to submit an invoice, my jaw just kind of dropped, and of course, no one wanted to put a number on the job, know what I mean?
RafalK wrote on 1/28/2004, 10:13 AM
We just had a thread on this, Yes B&H seems to have the best reputation but follow this link to more info in case you're interested.
http://mediasoftware.sonypictures.com/forums/ShowMessage.asp?ForumID=4&MessageID=246194
Chanimal wrote on 1/28/2004, 10:40 AM
I guess I might be the exception, I've been charging $100 an hour for any paying project. Of course, most of mine are corporate videos for GE (9 so far), Motorola (2) and others.

I thought my prices were cheap. I've paid $15 - $30k for a corporate video (script, directing, filming, editing, music, etc.), while I've been able to complete the process in 20-30 hours, costing them just $2-$3k.

Videos for show at www.TheVideomaker.com

***************
Ted Finch
Chanimal.com

Windows 11 Pro, i9 (10850k - 20 logical cores), Corsair water-cooled, MSI Gaming Plus motherboard, 64 GB Corsair RAM, 4 Samsung Pro SSD drives (1 GB, 2 GB, 2 GB and 4 GB), AMD video Radeo RX 580, 4 Dell HD monitors.Canon 80d DSL camera with Rhode mic, Zoom H4 mic. Vegas Pro 21 Edit (user since Vegas 2.0), Camtasia (latest), JumpBacks, etc.