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I would say by offering so much for free of charge, you're undervaluing yourself. No business is going to take you seriously if you offer your time for free. Now obviously the initial consultation should be free - especially since you're unheard of. If you end up developing software for them, you really have to charge for a number of reasons:

  • They will never take you seriously if you don't
  • Not charging destroys the client-consultancy relationship, and it will be easy to lose control of the project. For example, how can you say "We can change the spec but it will cost xxx"?
  • Unless you have unlimited capital, it would be unbelievably risky to develop software for free up-front.

Edit Quoting from a comment:

...I don't really know about any industry apart from software/web development. And there's no way I'm going to devote time to learning a new industry, when I don't even know if software will be helpful in that industry.

In that case, the whole idea seems a bit odd. Basically, a lot of what you're doing is consultancy. If you have no industry knowledge, and you're not willing to immerse yourself in each industry you hope to improve and create software for, I really don't see how this plan can work.

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I would say by offering so much for free of charge, you're undervaluing yourself. No business is going to take you seriously if you offer your time for free. Now obviously the initial consultation should be free - especially since you're unheard of. If you end up developing software for them, you really have to charge for a number of reasons:

  • They will never take you seriously if you don't
  • Not charging destroys the client-consultancy relationship, and it will be easy to lose control of the project. For example, how can you say "We can change the spec but it will cost xxx"?
  • Unless you have unlimited capital, it would be unbelievably risky to develop software for free up-front.