tdstructural
Structural
- Jun 12, 2010
- 29
This post spawns from an earlier one but I don't want to take over another post and it is still a different topic.
I'm a licensed PE with 18 years of experience. All of my experience is in structures. I work on the west coast so high seismic is the norm for me. The typical bill rate (+/- $5 or $10 per hour) for structural engineering work in my area of the United States is as follows:
EIT $85/hr
Eng I $125/hr
Eng II $165/hr
Senior Engineer $180/hr
Principal Engineer $210/hr - $250/hr
Senior Principal Engineer $350/hr
I am the subcontractor that the small engineering firms hire when they need immediate short term help. They don't have to hire a full time employee with benefits/tax concerns. My clients occasionally need my expertise but more often than not they just need help for a short period of time.
I received feed back (from an earlier comment on this site) that I wasn't charging enough for my services which is a big problem for me. Not so much because I can't pay my bills but because I think that in general we as engineers tend to 'give away the farm'. I don't want to make it more difficult for engineers and we should be getting paid appropriately considering our liability, education and skills.
I set my fees based on my desire to earn money but also keep my clients profitable. I figured if they have to 'win' the project based on fees they need to bill at the appropriate rate. If the work I am providing is at the EIT level and they need to make money - their bill rate at $85 is more than my bill rate at $75. Therefore we both make money.
But the more I think about this - and having read your posts - I complete my work in less time than an EIT. Therefore, my hourly rate can be higher than their EIT rate and my client still makes money. Plus - if I was their full time employee I would still only cost (with benefits) about $85/hour and they bill me out at $180/hour.
Finally - my questions:
Is it OK to ask for different rates based on the work I'm performing?
I am open to lump sum fees so maybe I should be doing more of that - yes/no?
If you were my client - does my argument above make sense to you or would you drop me as a subcontractor?
I appreciate any and all feedback. Thanks!
I'm a licensed PE with 18 years of experience. All of my experience is in structures. I work on the west coast so high seismic is the norm for me. The typical bill rate (+/- $5 or $10 per hour) for structural engineering work in my area of the United States is as follows:
EIT $85/hr
Eng I $125/hr
Eng II $165/hr
Senior Engineer $180/hr
Principal Engineer $210/hr - $250/hr
Senior Principal Engineer $350/hr
I am the subcontractor that the small engineering firms hire when they need immediate short term help. They don't have to hire a full time employee with benefits/tax concerns. My clients occasionally need my expertise but more often than not they just need help for a short period of time.
I received feed back (from an earlier comment on this site) that I wasn't charging enough for my services which is a big problem for me. Not so much because I can't pay my bills but because I think that in general we as engineers tend to 'give away the farm'. I don't want to make it more difficult for engineers and we should be getting paid appropriately considering our liability, education and skills.
I set my fees based on my desire to earn money but also keep my clients profitable. I figured if they have to 'win' the project based on fees they need to bill at the appropriate rate. If the work I am providing is at the EIT level and they need to make money - their bill rate at $85 is more than my bill rate at $75. Therefore we both make money.
But the more I think about this - and having read your posts - I complete my work in less time than an EIT. Therefore, my hourly rate can be higher than their EIT rate and my client still makes money. Plus - if I was their full time employee I would still only cost (with benefits) about $85/hour and they bill me out at $180/hour.
Finally - my questions:
Is it OK to ask for different rates based on the work I'm performing?
I am open to lump sum fees so maybe I should be doing more of that - yes/no?
If you were my client - does my argument above make sense to you or would you drop me as a subcontractor?
I appreciate any and all feedback. Thanks!