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by mbesto 5019 days ago
> Such a rate is unheard of in software consulting as far as I know.

$1000 is not unheard of at all. Yes, you're right, the likes of EDS, IBM, Accenture, etc. are easily charging the upwards of $1k/day. But any decently sized firm (50+ employees) is going to charge roughly that amount. You'd be shocked to hear some of the price tags on corporate website development...

I think this is the overall point. Go for a small specialist who will treat you like a king/queen. You don't need a corporate law firm. There are too many transaction costs that you simply don't need (assuming you're small) or can risk accept not having.

1 comments

>Yes, you're right, the likes of EDS, IBM, Accenture, etc. are easily charging the upwards of $1k/day.

I said $1k PER HOUR, not per day.

I'd like to know of software consultancies that charge that much money per hour, excepting the typical fleecing when your deals are built on backroom backscratches like you'd find with the public companies served by EDS et al.

Percona has over fifty employees and they charge $350/hr for standard services and $450/hr for premium service. You only go to Percona if you have a very, very specific MySQL problem that needs to be resolved, and the staff at Percona is populated with as many major MySQL players as are willing. They definitely represent the big guns, when you really, really need your MySQL stuff fixed ASAP and can't fiddle around with people who aren't core MySQL developers, the people who invented the system. They are the top of the line in their niche, and they charge as much as a fresh-from-college lawyer.

A normal, generic consultancy will charge between $100/hr-$200/hr and often their employees aren't anything to sneeze at either, they're just less specialized and therefore have a less compelling case for such high rates. I know of no one in the realm of standard or even most niche commercial software consultancy that rakes in $1000/hr+.

If you know such a company, I'd like to learn their strategy so that I can start charging that much.

First of all, that $1k per hour was pulled out of my ass. That was my piss-poor attempt at using humour to point out that people tend to underestimate someone else's value just because we don't understand their profession. I'm pretty sure a lawyer's work involves more than "blame-shifting".

Secondly, $1000/hour works out to about $240,000 per month. It's a high figure, but I have worked on a 3-month project that cost the client $1,000,000 before. Granted it wasn't a 1-man job, and God only knows I didn't get to see much of that money, but still, that was how much the client was billed for.