how do you even make 120k per year? what kind of software are you developing? what country are you based in exactly? how did you find your clients? sorry for asking so many questions, but I found it difficult to charge such a rate.
I’m based in Germany. Currently building a webservice with lots of different integrations, mostly Python. We basically build the whole thing, choosing our own stack. On my day-to-day I work on developing the platform but also on integration and lots of management to bring multiple parties on the same page.
I’m charging 100 EUR per hour which seems in line with what others with the same amount of expierence are charging. The client I’m currently working for contacted me through a freelancer platform here in Germany.
With me, there are three other devs working on the platform. I was their “first hire”, leading the team. Other team members charge a bit less at around 75 EUR per hour.
This is a bit of a tangent, and salary is often discussed on HN.
Companies whose software is important enough will gladly pay that.
There are two ways to get to a significantly higher salary; one is finding out what people who earn more do better than you, and do that, and the other is boldly asking for more. You can do either one or both. I've always felt better having some reason why I should have more. (Also, I always earned $93k-105k. I once had the option to earn $144k doing Drupal, and another time $122k at close to zero tax doing Blockchain, but my biggest career mistake so far was taking a job just for the pay raise.)
eftel|4 years ago
I’m charging 100 EUR per hour which seems in line with what others with the same amount of expierence are charging. The client I’m currently working for contacted me through a freelancer platform here in Germany.
With me, there are three other devs working on the platform. I was their “first hire”, leading the team. Other team members charge a bit less at around 75 EUR per hour.
mgliwka|4 years ago
e19293001|4 years ago
sshine|4 years ago
Companies whose software is important enough will gladly pay that.
There are two ways to get to a significantly higher salary; one is finding out what people who earn more do better than you, and do that, and the other is boldly asking for more. You can do either one or both. I've always felt better having some reason why I should have more. (Also, I always earned $93k-105k. I once had the option to earn $144k doing Drupal, and another time $122k at close to zero tax doing Blockchain, but my biggest career mistake so far was taking a job just for the pay raise.)