active questions tagged consulting - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-01T10:08:19Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/consulting http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1767819/net-consulting-rates-what-is-the-highest-you-have-charged 1 .net consulting rates: what is the highest you have charged? [closed] dotnet-practitioner 2009-11-20T01:45:44Z 2009-11-20T02:00:12Z <p>As an asp.net or .net developer what is the highest consulting rate you have charged? I have read some where that share point consultant are in very high demand and can charge high consulting dollars. High dollars to me mean $100/hour. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1739553/how-do-you-find-outside-programming-help 1 How do you find outside programming help? tylerl 2009-11-16T01:02:39Z 2009-11-16T01:25:31Z <p>Where do you go to find high-quality outside development help? Alternately, if you are a high-quality independent developer, where do you go find projects to work on?</p> <p>I own a software and IT consulting and development company, and occasionally we get requests for projects that would require more resources than my team has to spare. My own experience with outside developers has been that despite their lofty endorsements, certifications, and accolades, the work they deliver is unusably poor.</p> <p>So, if you're a developer who really knows his craft, or a small business in search of a developer you can trust to do the job right (not just well enough to get paid), how do you meet up?</p> <p><strong>Please, don't post your contact information here.</strong> The question is about the way you find independent developers, not a call for bids or resumés.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1706288/piece-of-advice-needed-to-buld-my-new-pattern-of-resume 1 Piece of advice needed to buld my new pattern of resume [closed] gowri 2009-11-10T07:58:49Z 2009-11-10T08:24:01Z <p>Hi friends.... At present i am doing my final year engineering in India. I have to apply for scholarship in order to continue with my higher studies in sweden. The documents they require includes my current CV. I don't know how to frame a international standard resume. I went on google search and had a glance at few samples, but i am not satisfied with them. My resume plays a vital role in my selection... so can anyone suggest me some new and attractive format of CV???? They must find my resume appealing.... please friends... can anyone help me out???</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1681513/commercial-companies-you-can-contract-with-for-help -1 commercial companies you can contract with for help [closed] Delirium tremens 2009-11-05T15:58:57Z 2009-11-05T16:26:32Z <p>I was reading <a href="http://catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html" rel="nofollow">a page</a> about asking <em>programming</em> questions (if you don't believe me, verify at the page) and it said "There are also plenty of commercial companies you can contract with for help, both large and small (Red Hat and SpikeSource are two of the best known; there are many others).", so now, for when StacK Overflow isn't enough, I want to know what company among the many others you would use and why?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1156592/best-way-to-track-time-spent-working-on-a-project-as-a-consultant-on-many-project 7 Best way to track time spent working on a project as a consultant on many projects? Andrew Siemer 2009-07-20T23:51:23Z 2009-11-04T20:21:52Z <p>I have been a consultant for many years now and find myself crossing the barriers of being at client A while working on client B...then taking part in a meeting over the phone for client C, etc.</p> <p>I was curious what methods other people in my shoes used to track the time across many clients, projects, and tasks. Preferably something that worked with an iPhone so that it would be accessible at all times..but all ideas are welcome!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/666668/i-have-an-idea-for-a-great-piece-of-software-but-i-cant-code-where-do-i-start 5 I have an idea for a great piece of software, but I can't code. Where do I start? Rich Armstrong 2009-03-20T15:35:41Z 2009-10-26T15:11:58Z <p>We occasionally get approached by people who want someone to write software for them. They often take the form of:</p> <blockquote> <p>I have a great idea for a piece of software and I want to find someone to write it for me. I have money to fund a project. Can you help me?</p> </blockquote> <p>We are fully a "shrink-wrap" software firm, providing production software for purchase by the general public, not bespoke solutions. Thus, we don't really have experience with consulting or contracting companies. We don't want to shut these people down with "you got the wrong guy, pal!" When people write us, we like to help them.</p> <p>The question: If you were this person, with an idea and money, but not the knowledge to write it yourself, how would you go about finding someone to write your piece of software? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1466801/contractor-hourly-rate-based-on-consulting-rate 1 contractor hourly rate based on consulting rate contractor rate 2009-09-23T15:35:59Z 2009-09-24T07:04:43Z <p>I am considering working for a consultant that charges a known rate, lets say $100/hour. As a contractor working for the consultant, what hourly rate should I expect?</p> <p>Edit:</p> <ul> <li>This could become a permanent source of work.</li> <li>It is mostly Rails work.</li> <li>I do know that the business overhead is low - everyone works from home with their own equipment.</li> <li>I am not adding skills the consultant or his current contractors don't already have.</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1469991/can-a-salaried-computer-programmer-manage-part-time-contracting 2 Can a salaried computer programmer manage part-time contracting? fakeaccount 2009-09-24T06:06:14Z 2009-09-24T06:43:43Z <p>I'm a salaried computer programmer, and I make a pretty good living at it. I've been thinking of supplementing my income by handling a few part-time, paid consulting opportunities. I'm worried, though, that tinkering on the side might burn me out, that it might affect my work, or that it might get me in trouble at work if they find out about it.</p> <p>I'm also wondering what to charge. Is there a rule of thumb I can use to turn salary $X into an hourly consulting rate? Let's say I make $50k as a programmer. I figure that translates into $25/hr, not including benefits. Should I ask for maybe 50% more than that for hourly consulting part-time? 100% more? If I made $100k/year, should I ask for $100/hr?</p> <p>Any advice from folks who have tried this sort of thing already? Am I just asking for trouble, or is this a great, go-getter sort of idea?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1278026/are-there-any-good-metaphors-for-explaining-project-complexity-to-a-non-programme 35 Are there any good metaphors for explaining project complexity to a non-programmer? John MacIntyre 2009-08-14T14:01:46Z 2009-09-21T01:23:57Z <p>It was just mentioned that I'm "not exactly building the Sistine Chapel." This is true, but I am building a freight management application, which isn't exactly as simple as drawing controls on a form (even though the vendors would have you believe it is).</p> <p>I don't hold this against the person who said it, but I do feel the complexity of what I'm doing is a little misunderstood, or that statement would not have been made.</p> <p>Are there any good metaphors which might illustrate a project's complexity to non-programmers?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/172668/full-time-programmer-or-software-development-consultant 18 Full-time programmer or software development consultant? DV 2008-10-05T21:05:19Z 2009-09-19T18:03:21Z <p>In your opinion and experience, what's best - working full-time and long-term for one company, or part-time short-term on many smaller projects or parts of projects? What do you think are the pros and cons of both?</p> <p>I heard that being a consultant is more profitable and one would pick up more experience. Does that beat an 8 hours by 5 days (thanks to Jon Limjap for correction :)) job of coding in a cubicle?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1431166/what-is-the-best-way-to-tell-a-client-they-need-to-pay-more 3 What is the best way to tell a client they need to pay more? gersh 2009-09-16T05:53:17Z 2009-09-18T15:53:45Z <p>I charge by the hour for custom development. Generally, the client agrees to pay for so many hours, and then I get feature-creep. Often, the clients try to get me to continue working for free. Although, when I tell them their time is up, and they need to pay more if they want to continue, they get upset. What is the best way to convince them to pay for more time?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/208445/how-do-i-make-my-customers-not-like-me-too-much 11 How do I make my customers not like me too much? fuzzbone 2008-10-16T13:01:34Z 2009-09-08T20:00:11Z <p>In 2004 I went to work for a consulting firm because I like variety, challenges, working with new technologies, etc. However, I've been a developer for 25 years - and spent the majority of my career as a direct-hire (12 years) then as an independent consultant for another 3 years (ah the DotCom bubble!) for one firm. So my instincts are more like a good internal developer than a consultant.</p> <p>My problem is what I call the "catch-22" of consulting. You go into consulting because you want to work at a lot of different engagements, but if you do a really good job your clients never want to let you go. And of course the salespeople are happy to keep you billing (and don’t want to alienate a good customer) So my question is – how do I overcome this? I have had some colleagues who had just the right type of “arrogance” (for lack of a better term) that made them initially attractive to some clients, but would grate on them over time – but that just isn’t my style. I want to do good work and be successful for my clients, but be able to “gracefully” move on after a reasonable amount of time.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/200492/how-should-i-decide-rates-and-negotiate-as-a-contractor 2 How should I decide rates and negotiate as a contractor? pdeva 2008-10-14T09:23:06Z 2009-09-08T19:25:29Z <p>I am planning on starting out doing consulting in the bay area. I would like to know how do you guys decide on consulting rates for a project and how do you go about negotiating them with a client?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/535450/software-used-to-create-consulting-invoices 4 Software used to create consulting invoices rwmnau 2009-02-11T04:40:13Z 2009-09-06T21:09:06Z <p>At any given time, I do consulting for between 2-4 clients, and I'm having some trouble keeping track of the hours and generating invoices. My current solution is to use Google Calendar to track my hours, and then at month-end, manually enter the data on an Excel template I have (one copy for each customer) and email it to them. While this works, it's lacking a few things I'd like, so I wanted to see if the SO community had any recommendations for tracking these hours. What I'd like:</p> <ul> <li>Should be web-based and hosted - I don't want to set it up on my server</li> <li>Breaks down hours by client and project/task. I have a few long-running or ongoing tasks for certain clients, and I'd like to present each task as a single line on the invoice (instead of 5 lines of 1 hour each on this task, I spent 5 hours this month on this task).</li> <li>As month-end approaches, I can see a summary report for my hours per client so far. I have one client who has a retainer, and I'd like an easy way to tell them that they have X unused hours this month without manually adding up time I've already entered.</li> <li>Though I'd obviously prefer free, it's not a requirement - I'm happy to pay a reasonable monthly fee for a site that does what I need.</li> <li>Straight-forward way to convert the data to an invoice. If I have to copy/paste, that's okay, as long as I'm not entering any data or doing something else I might mess up.</li> </ul> <p>Not necessary (but in some cases, nice to have):</p> <ul> <li>I'd like some more advanced reporting - like hours/task overall, other time periods, etc - but the only required report is a monthly summary that's easily converted to an invoice.</li> <li>I don't need a complete billing platform. I use Quicken to track bills and payments, so while I could switch this to a new tool, I don't need that functionality.</li> <li>I don't need a time mangement tool. I already have something else I use for that - I just need a billable-hours/invoicing tool.</li> <li>I don't generate "timecard"-style invoices for any of my clients - just a monthly summary with hours/project for the entire month. I don't need something that's going to generate my clients a play-by-play of how I got those hours - just a summary.</li> </ul> <p>Given these requirements, do any SO users out there have a solution they can recommend? While my current solution works, it's prone to mis-keying data and it's tedious, so I'd like something more reliable.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1219052/determining-value-based-fees-for-software-projects 5 Determining Value-Based Fees for Software Projects Mark Richman 2009-08-02T14:46:16Z 2009-08-07T18:25:54Z <p>There is another post on here <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1011798/how-to-quote-a-project-development-cost">"How to quote project development cost"</a> where user SpliFF commented: </p> <blockquote> <p>This is not a labor market, you are selling knowledge and solutions. Some solutions are better than others. 10 hours of failing is worth much less than 10 hours of building a killer app. You need to stop thinking about time and costs and focus on the value of the outcome. Compare it to products of similar value. Slapping an arbitrary 40% on 'project cost' to determine value is ridiculous.</p> </blockquote> <p>While I generally agree that Value-Based Fees (a la Alan Weiss) are the best way to charge and get what you're worth as a consultant, I don't know how well this approach translates to the software development domain.</p> <p>How do you determine value to the client without spending inordinate time performing requirements discovery and analysis? How do you manage change requests in a Value-Based fees approach?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1217188/explaining-web-application-developer-vs-web-site-designer-to-prospective-cli 10 Explaining "Web Application Developer" vs. "Web Site Designer" to prospective clients Mark Richman 2009-08-01T18:35:33Z 2009-08-01T23:35:02Z <p>How do I go about explaining that I am a "Web Application Developer" and not a "Web Site Designer" to prospective clients - without talking myself out of the project?! </p> <p>Often I am approached to "design a web site" for someone where it turns out to be more of a "brochureware" presentation site and less of a real web application.</p> <p>While I am a highly skilled developer, I am not a graphic artist. That said, I would still like to be able to close deals with prospects without disqualifying myself. Simply stating, "I do backend work, not frontend" will quickly end the conversation, and along with it my opportunity for work.</p> <p>Sure, I can just subcontract the project to a real designer and mark up his rate, but I would rather be up front with the client that I am not going to be the guy doing the actual work and they would be paying $120/hr for $60/hr work.</p> <p>...and then they will ask price - is visual design often quoted hourly like app dev is, or will I get sucked into the oblivion that is fixed fees?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1156019/consultant-contractor-or-freelancer 1 Consultant, contractor, or freelancer? Tony 2009-07-20T21:23:20Z 2009-07-20T21:51:50Z <p>I have been using consultant, contractor, and freelancer interchangeably. I just started working for myself and have been wondering about how to market myself and which term to use. Am I a consultant, contractor, or freelancer? Or maybe I am all three of those. If so, which should I call myself? </p> <p>I have no idea but consultant just sounds like a higher paying title. So....for all the solo workers out there...What do you call yourself and why? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1088871/consulting-price-suggestions 2 Consulting price suggestions nilamo 2009-07-06T19:42:38Z 2009-07-06T20:35:03Z <p>In a few days I'll be meeting with the owner and a few others of a small business. At this meeting, I'll be discussing their website, specifically how I would plan to improve it. I have already had a few discussions with employees at this company, so I have a good idea about what they like/dislike about the site now, as well as a few key new features they want.</p> <p>If the owner likes what I have to say, the topic of compensation is bound to come up. I'm fresh out of college, and this'll be my first <em>major</em> position. I've done a few websites for a few different people in the past, but by far nothing of this magnitude.</p> <p>A few other details:</p> <ul> <li>The previous maintainer of the site has left the company (I have yet to hear a reason why...)</li> <li>Right now, small updates are being done by one of the techs (it's an auto shop, he just happens to know a little php), but his 'free time' is very small, so the site has been falling into disrepair recently.</li> <li>Multiple people (including the above mentioned person) have told me that the code base is a 'mess'. So it's not just the site's external appearance that needs a facelift, it's the behind-the-scenes part as well, so that updating the site in the future is easier.</li> </ul> <p>When discussing compensation, it's already been hinted at that there are two (possibly others, as well) different paths that can be taken: consultant or full time. They don't really have a preference, but I'll need to have some numbers ready for both. It has also been hinted at that, because it's a small company, all the full time employees do a little of everything, which means I would almost certainly handle the occational sales call (I have several years retail experience, so that doesn't bother me, but it might factor into wages).</p> <p>(if it matters) This is in the Detroit Metro area.</p> <p>I'd love to hear what you guys think about this. Like I said, I'm pretty new to this, so I have very little ideas at all as to what 'fair' prices would be, for either contracting or full-time.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28567/how-do-i-name-a-consulting-company 16 How do I name a consulting company? James A. Rosen 2008-08-26T16:43:28Z 2009-07-01T16:21:46Z <p>At some point, I'd like to follow some of the advice on SOFlow and start my own small consulting / software shop. (Consulting because it's easy to get work, software because it scales much better.)</p> <p>I understand the naming behind "<a href="http://lesseverything.com/" rel="nofollow">Less Everything</a>" - they make minimalist products. But where does "<a href="http://37signals.com/" rel="nofollow">37 Signals</a>" come from? And "<a href="http://fogcreek.com/" rel="nofollow">Fog Creek</a>"?</p> <p>I want to avoid using my name, because I'd like to build the business up to at least a few people. I'd also like to avoid the stuff that <a href="http://www.bandnamemaker.com/" rel="nofollow">random-band-name generators</a> spew out.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1066989/how-do-i-approach-a-company-looking-for-contract-work 1 How do I approach a company looking for contract work? Chris Rittersdorf 2009-07-01T02:09:10Z 2009-07-01T03:37:07Z <p>After about 3 years of working a 9-5 at a couple companies, I've found myself unemployed. My current location doesn't seem to have many opportunities that interest me, so I'm considering working from home doing contract work.</p> <p>I've started to send out some resumes to postings I've seen on boards like jobs.rubynow.com and similar web-sites. I haven't had much response though. I'm not sure what a company is looking for other than "where did you hear about us" and seeing my resume. </p> <p>Is there any sort of protocol that companies looking for contract work like to see in a cold-call sort of email?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/822206/how-do-you-deal-with-a-company-that-has-misplaced-their-trust-in-a-developer 5 How do you deal with a company that has misplaced their trust in a developer? Spencer Ruport 2009-05-04T21:41:34Z 2009-06-20T01:19:20Z <p>I've recently started working with a company that needs ongoing support for their site. They already have a consultant whom they seem very pleased with and have placed a great deal of trust in him.</p> <p>Here's the thing. The "Web App" is a regular frankenstein of various systems using Access, FTP, DTS, ASP Classic and ASP.Net. I've only scratched the surface but here's a process I've discovered today. In order for some content that is regularly updated to be added to the web site a regular user will open up an Access application and begin entering information. This information is stored in linked tables living on the intranet MSSQL server. When the user is satisfied with the content and finalizes the content the Access application starts several DTS tasks which connect to the live (web) MSSQL server which has been exposed to the cloud and transfer records from the intranet db to the live db. The access app also grabs various image files and queues a task to FTP them to the web site. There's also some processes that require the user to copy/paste records directly from a linked intranet db table to the live linked db table through this Access application.</p> <p>As if that weren't bad enough this system has been around for awhile so the DTS tasks, DB tables and a host of other entities have really confusing names like "<code>UploadTask_Step2_Old</code>" and "<code>ArticleImages_bad</code>". Many pages on the public site aren't properly sanitizing querystring values and even worse, it's currently broken and the 2 main developers just left.</p> <p>Despite all of this from what I gather the owners of the company feel that their system works well and they're happy with it. My impression is that even though they have been hiring intern level developers at this point I feel that the consultant should have alerted them to the fact that their system was turning into a monstrosity. How do I convey to them that this consultant is either 1) intentionally pulling the wool over their eyes and not keeping them properly appraised of the health of their system or 2) he doesn't know any better?</p> <p>I have some ideas but I know the SO community has some valid input to offer.</p> <p><strong>UPDATE</strong></p> <p>After a few weeks of explaining, suggesting and prodding it was becoming pretty clear they weren't going for the much needed changes anytime soon. I explained to them I wouldn't be able to help and took my leave. One of those "You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink" kind of things I suppose.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/799469/do-consulting-companies-focus-on-code-quality 7 Do consulting companies focus on code quality? burnt1ce 2009-04-28T19:22:34Z 2009-06-01T17:43:15Z <p>I've gotten a couple of interviews from companies to fill a junior software developer, half of which are consulting companies. </p> <p>My last and first job didn't really focus on code quality and was very budget oriented. Creating high quality code is something that I want to practice doing from now on.</p> <p>So my question is, do consulting companies care about code quality? If i had to guess, i would say 'no' but i could be wrong and correct me if i am.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/843921/where-does-open-source-help-end-and-consulting-begins 3 Where does open source help end, and consulting begins? Alex 2009-05-09T19:57:23Z 2009-05-20T07:46:39Z <p>As one of the core contributors for an open-source framework, I'm frequently dazzled by the blurry line between "open source help" and consulting. I'd like to ask for your advice on the matter. </p> <p>Frequently, people using the framework would post 400+ lines of their code and expect me/others to dig through it to find an error; there are two conflicting forces in my head:</p> <ul> <li>On one side, I want to foster the community and help everyone</li> <li>On the other side, I just physically can't invest 2-3 hours into a forum thread - this feels like "free consulting" to me</li> </ul> <p>Here's an <a href="http://qcu.be/content/display-dialog-box-through-datagrid-qpanel" rel="nofollow">example thread</a> if you want to take a look at an example. I'm curious to hear about where you would draw the line. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/658312/working-from-home-on-own-equipment 1 Working from home on own equipment. rmeyer137 2009-03-18T13:45:12Z 2009-05-19T14:37:01Z <p>Here is the scenario; I'm a .Net software developer that works from home using my own equipment, which I prefer to do because I have a pretty good system for development (dual screens, fast system....)</p> <p>However from time to time I find that I need to upgrade ram, disk or something that would make it easier and sometimes faster to develop applications. </p> <p>Since my employer (yes I'm not consulting) didn't have to purchase any equipment and I have a zero space foot print in the office I feel that there should be some sharing of the hardware upgrades.</p> <p>My questions comes down to this, What arrangement have you had (or suggest) that would be fair to both parties. What justifications do you come up with? Or do you think I'm way off base here? </p> <p>As always, comments welcomed.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/842431/am-i-charging-enough-i-think-i-may-have-put-myself-in-a-weird-situation 4 Am I charging enough? I think I may have put myself in a weird situation... Brian NYC 2009-05-09T00:59:19Z 2009-05-11T05:18:59Z <p>Here's my situation with rough numbers. I'd like to know if my thinking (at the bottom) seems sound to you guys. (Side note: I've read many of the related questions on here, and helpful as they were, none seemed to touch on this specific issue.)</p> <p>For 2 years I was a senior developer at Company X. I was full-time, W-2, and making $100k/yr with benefits. (Roughly $50/hr).</p> <p>[Then I got laid off, but that's not the point. I am in a large city and can find work easily. I am very happy to work from home rather than in an office.]</p> <p>For 2 months I've done a few freelance projects for Company Y, a web firm. This was 1099, and I am charging $80/hr. (I did 100 or so hours over 2 or so months and figured I'd need to get some other clients soon).</p> <p>Company Y loves my work and has gained new jobs because of it. They want more of my time and have offered me a 6 month contract, paid a fixed monthly rate regardless of hours (they assume 40ish per week). I'd still be working remotely.</p> <p>SO...</p> <p>My freelance rate is higher than my old W-2 full-time rate for obvious reasons. I also realize that since freelancing "full time" requires lots of administrivia and sales, I would never really be racking up 40 hrs/wk at my $80 rate. (I've been toying with the idea of charging any other clients more, like $100/hr.)</p> <p>However, I realize that from Company Y's perspective, offering me the security of a 6 month retainer contract should drive my hourly rate down (bulk discount?) since I'd now have way more billable hours and less administrivia. This still has got to be a raise on my old W-2 job for it to be worth my while though, especially due to the lack of benefits and the more complex tax situation.</p> <p>Now I wish I had originally charged Company Y $100/hr for the initial freelance projects so that I could give them a better deal and charge them $80/hr for this 6 month contract.</p> <p>Sorry for being so long winded, but I hope you guys get my drift. Essentially, I should be giving them a lower hourly, but I really don't want to.</p> <p>Is my assumption correct that as far as hourly rates go,</p> <p><strong>full-time-W-2 &lt; long-term 1099 &lt; short-term-project-based 1099</strong> ?</p> <p>If so, what might a good negotiation strategy be with Company Y to keep my hourly rate as is, and effectively nix their bulk discount? "Hey guys, you were getting a super low rate on those individual projects!"</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28476/what-are-the-ethics-of-time-management-while-working-for-pay 26 What are the ethics of time management while working for pay? levand 2008-08-26T16:02:05Z 2009-05-04T05:29:53Z <p>This is a daily question, for me, and I think one that is applicable to any professional programmer, especially those who, like myself, work for consulting firms and may have insane amounts of money billed for each hour they work.</p> <p>How do you deal with the fact that if I get a call from my wife and talk for 10 minutes, that's $30 of my client's money down the drain? Or if I take an extra 20 minutes on my lunch break, I didn't really work an 8 hour day as my employer expects? What about checking email, even though it only takes 2 minutes? But what if I do it 15 times throughout the day?</p> <p>Furthermore, due to the tools we're using at my current project, there are frequent 5-10 minute periods while waiting for something to compile. Is it unprofessional to go and read blogs while this happens, or should I really be working on some other trivial but related task while this happens? Or, as I have been tempted to do recently, multitask and do some research on my own projects in the gaps between my real work?</p> <p>On one level, basic professional ethics would indicate that, while working, my time is not mine but my employer's and I ought to do nothing personal. But practically, that doesn't always work out so well in our field - the mind needs an occasional rest or diversion in order to perform optimally. And at any rate, where do you draw the line? Should I clock out whenever I go to the lavatory?</p> <p>Plus, there's always the other excuses. For me, they tend to run along the lines of "But I'm still the most productive programmers here... Sure, I may waste ten minutes out of the hour, sometimes, but the clients are very happy with me, so what does it matter? Besides, it's a known overhead cost." And, of course, the perennial "But everyone else is doing it, and way more than I do. Hell, my boss spends over an hour every day on smoke breaks. Isn't reading programming blogs more profitable than that?" </p> <p>All of these things are true, by the way. I don't struggle with self discipline, and I am doing very well in my current position. My employers and clients are very happy with me. I feel that I do get a lot of good work done. But I still feel guilty whenever I "waste time" at work.</p> <p>What do you all think? I'm particularly interested in the opinions of any employers or those who pay for programmers' time.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/54130/billing-for-phone-calls 9 Billing for phone calls AdamTheHutt 2008-09-10T14:09:43Z 2009-05-04T05:24:54Z <p>I have an arrangement with a couple of my regular clients whereby there's a regularly scheduled conference call to chat about various work being done and also new stuff coming down the pipe.</p> <p>At first I never billed for this time, since some of it was spent on sales-y stuff like discussing potential new projects, etc. It also just seemed like a nice way to build goodwill.</p> <p>Over time, however, this has become problematic and I feel like I'm being taken advantage of. We're a small shop and often as many as 3 people need to attend these conference calls. For a 90 minute call, that's around $500 of potentially billable time that's being given away for free. Considering these calls happen once per week for a couple of different clients, and it adds up to something like $5K/month in lost (potential) revenue.</p> <p>What are standard industry practices around this kind of thing? Should I insist on billing for this time? Or is that being greedy and was my initial instinct not to bill correct?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/716814/dealing-with-multiple-consulting-projects 3 Dealing with multiple consulting projects Click Upvote 2009-04-04T09:23:55Z 2009-05-02T17:21:30Z <p>As a freelance programmer, it can be a good thing when you quote for 4-5 jobs and get all 5 of them. It can mean lots of money, but it also has the effect of stress/burnout, and not knowing where to start and how to get anything done. Especially when each of the 5 clients want a daily progress report.</p> <p>How do you organize your time and to-do list in such a situation?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8044/what-the-difference-between-consulting-and-contracting 10 What the difference between Consulting and Contracting Lance Fisher 2008-08-11T18:15:07Z 2009-04-30T13:19:00Z <p>In regards to programming, what is the difference between being a contractor, and a consultant?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/415451/does-someone-have-a-sample-software-consulting-proposal-and-or-contract 4 Does someone have a sample software consulting proposal and/or contract? TheSoftwareJedi 2009-01-06T04:24:48Z 2009-04-20T10:13:59Z <p>In the past, I've always done independent contracting work for people and they pay me via a 1099. Never really a formal contract or proposal, etc...</p> <p>I now have a software consulting company and will be invoicing customers under that name. I'd like to begin doing more formal proposals and contracts based on the work I'm given.</p> <p>I've been burned in the past but it's never been for much money, but now I'm starting to do some pretty big jobs for start-ups (high risk) and I feel that I need to enter into legally binding contracts with companies that use our services.</p> <p>Do you have any sample proposals and/or contracts that I can use as a start? I've googled extensively, but can't find anything good...</p> <p>Also, what is the industry standard "retainer" or "upfront" payment that I should ask for? I've always done 25%, then monthly billing based on actuals...</p>