2005-01-13 01:20 AM
2006-08-21 10:07 PM
2006-08-30 05:02 PM
2006-08-30 05:16 PM
2006-08-30 05:48 PM
Dwight wrote:Agree about being too low, but I don't see the problem in being high. If you provide a high level of expertise and service, you SHOULD be high. A middling fee pretty much says to a client, "yep, we're about like everybody else." Not a particularly compelling message, in my view.
Adding:
The problem is that one doesn't want to undercut the market and look like an idiot, nor be high.
2006-08-30 06:19 PM
2006-08-30 06:48 PM
Rick wrote:I really like that method! I might try that some time...
One of our clients has been very receptive to the following...
Quote a fixed fee based on hours estimated to completed a set of construction documents for the residence for a fixed amount of hours. If hours exceed the proposal, bill hourly at a low rate...50-75% of your regular hourly rate.
Stipulate client driven changes are billed at a regular or add service hourly rate
2006-08-30 07:01 PM
Dwight wrote:While all of this may be true at the extremes, in actual practice, just having a little more cachet can take even a commodity product to much higher levels of revenue. Mercedes Benz has plenty of competition (e.g Lexus, et al.), cranks out an enormous quantity of non-custom cars, yet the pricing is still quite high compared to "average" cars. Similarly, I see plenty of architects who get higher fees, not because they are better, but merely by asking for it. "Worth" is almost competely in the mind of the beholder.
This is the marketing concept "franchise versus commodity."
If you are established with a service type or distinct style that attracts custom, then you have "franchise." No competition for a unique product. Price no object. Curved titanium panels on your stuff.
2006-08-30 07:44 PM
2006-09-07 09:31 AM
David wrote:That's the direction interior design is going, too - just straight hourly fees. Some designers will cap the fees, and some will still also charge cost plus for purchases, either in addition to the hourly fee, or more often charging an hourly fee for design and then the cost plus for purchases instead, but flat fees are definitely a thing of the past.
This year marks a change in fee structures inspired by the industrial design industry. All design is charged hourly no maximum.
Vitruvius wrote:Guess what? US copyright law already protects all intellectual property and any sort of creative work as belonging solely to the creator. And you don't even have to register copyrights; they already exist, just by virtue of you having created the work, regardless of who has commissioned or paid for the work to be done.
Architects should really latch on to the copyright bandwagon. Our work is exactly the type of effort it's intended to promote and protect.
Rick wrote:I like the sounds of that, especially since I'm just starting out and really don't yet know how long it will actually take me to do most projects. I don't think clients should really have to pay for my learning curve, but I also don't want to be working entirely for free, either, if I really grossly underestimate things. This sort of scheme sounds like it could offer a very reasonable happy medium.
Quote a fixed fee based on hours estimated to completed a set of construction documents for the residence for a fixed amount of hours. If hours exceed the proposal, bill hourly at a low rate...50-75% of your regular hourly rate.
Stipulate client driven changes are billed at a regular or add service hourly rate
2006-09-07 09:31 AM
Rakela wrote:It strikes me that disclaimers would also be in order to the effect that you are working with a design provided by someone else, and that you will not be responsible for any errors in those drawings, or in your work that result from relying on those drawings.
put in writing that you are reproducing an already designd residence, and that new changes or modifications to the design will be charged in an hourly basis !!!