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by patio11
5022 days ago
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Would Patio11 be able to charge the same rate as a developer as he does as a "I will help you sell more software" consultant? I charge the same rate for software development as I do for making graphite etchings on paper in aesthetically pleasing patterns. Consulting clients buy both of these things from me, in isolation or combination, on a regular basis. So if that's the way you're asking the question, "Yes, I could." If the question is "If you brought nothing to the table other than the ability to write Ruby code, would you be able to charge $YOUR_RATE for writing Ruby code?", I think I'll go with "I can guarantee you that someone gets that much for writing Ruby, and probably more besides, but it probably wouldn't be me" and "Wait wait wait, you seem to want to sell yourself as a commodity coder, don't sell yourself as a commodity coder, down that path lines madness." |
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The "we found someone else cheaper than you" line is used all the time. It doesn't matter if it is true or not. Procurement's job definition is to convince you, Joe Freelance, that you are a commodity that competes solely on price for them. If you let them manipulate you into that mindset, then it is time to re-evaluate your unique value proposition and your negotiation process. This approach is also why you always see the business "hand off" to procurement once you have convinced the business they need you. They are trying to use the process to negotiate piecemeal and divorce the value props you just used from price, and the failure of procurement to realize why you are different and a better value is not a bug, it is a feature of their process. There is a lot more to be said, but I find a lot of technical consultants who look down on sales people are unaware of these basics of negotiation.