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  • New year and my blood pressure already rise...

    I'm curious if I was unreasonable or it's the times we're live in ...
    I got recently project to estimate.
    Here is what the client wanted: offshore oil platform in the middle of the sea , animation of camera coming from water level (waves on the sea), zooming into the platform , helicopter landing on it and supply ship approaching platform with some 3dimensional logo as cargo on it (total of 30 sec animation).
    I estimated it for 785 Euro in total (wanted to be really cheap . here's the client answer:
    oh btw he said it needs to be realistic

    "Ok, thanks for the offer, but got some better offers on my hand thanks anyways!"

    any comments ?
    Luke Szeflinski
    :: www.lukx.com cgi

  • #2
    he probably doesnt really know what he wants. also probably going to get something that looks shit.

    The times we live in are fine, it's just some of the people in it.
    Last edited by Neilg; 03-01-2012, 09:50 AM.

    Comment


    • #3
      He sounds like a wan*er. Walk away and have a beer.

      (BTW, that sounds like far more than 800 EURO's worth of work to me!)
      Kind Regards,
      Richard Birket
      ----------------------------------->
      http://www.blinkimage.com

      ----------------------------------->

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by tricky View Post

        (BTW, that sounds like far more than 800 EURO's worth of work to me!)
        yes it was worth much more but I wanted to be price competitive in nowadays 3d market but as we can see there's now way to win price war anyway ! and there are people who will do it for pennies !
        Luke Szeflinski
        :: www.lukx.com cgi

        Comment


        • #5
          How many hours do you estimate for the animation?
          I can do stills for 800$. I can often do stills quite fast, like 1-2 days.
          But I can't imagine doing an animation in under 1 week. I'm not very experienced with animation though. But every time I did one (like 5 times in total), it was so much work, just organizing all the data.
          Marc Lorenz
          ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
          www.marclorenz.com
          www.facebook.com/marclorenzvisualization

          Comment


          • #6
            i got a reply to this question for you Luke and you wont like it...

            chinese :-/...most probably some HongKong company...i woudl bet a lot of money on this probability

            sucks

            BTW

            did this come from T T?
            how did the cooperation go so far?
            just got the offer from him to do 10 exteriors monthly for approx 1.500 EUR but it just too low for the amount of work in my opinion
            Last edited by PIXELBOX_SRO; 03-01-2012, 11:07 PM.
            Martin
            http://www.pixelbox.cz

            Comment


            • #7
              yep , it was from TT I got same deal I was supposed to do this oilrig and if he like it I would have a "chance" to get those 1500 Eur projects ...
              Luke Szeflinski
              :: www.lukx.com cgi

              Comment


              • #8
                scumbag....ill send him to places.... grrrr
                Martin
                http://www.pixelbox.cz

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by lukx View Post
                  yes it was worth much more but I wanted to be price competitive in nowadays 3d market but as we can see there's now way to win price war anyway ! and there are people who will do it for pennies !
                  I think this is part of the problem. If everybody is in 'panic' mode and gives lower prices just to get the job, the whole of our industry is undermined. Charge what you think it is worth and not a penny less. If we all do that, I think the industry would be in a stronger position. We are never going to compete with the likes of China on price, so it isn't worth trying. Just offer top quality and give reasons why it is better to use you rather than a Chinese CGI factory.
                  Kind Regards,
                  Richard Birket
                  ----------------------------------->
                  http://www.blinkimage.com

                  ----------------------------------->

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    if you lower your price to compete with China, soon they will lower theirs. And soon we'll be doing this for free
                    Kind Regards,
                    Morne

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Guys dont lower ur prices. Just start advertising urselfs better. U only damage urselfs by lowering prices like that. Soon discavery channel will come and ask you to work for less than office cleaning lady...

                      Keep up ur prices and go get some advertising lessons and managing to get better clients
                      CGI - Freelancer - Available for work

                      www.dariuszmakowski.com - come and look

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        if you lower your fee, it would be very difficult to charge full price later.
                        show me the money!!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by DVP3D View Post
                          And soon we'll be doing this for free
                          Oh Cool. Let me know when you're doing that, I've loads of shots that need doing

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            In principle I agree that you need to hold your value as best you can, but one thing I don't hear a lot of is respecting the market demand. Rates are a balance of what we think our time is worth, and what the market is willing to pay - regardless of our opinion of the value. My feeling is that sometimes you actually need to lower your rates if you are priced out of the market, and rates are falling for most of our type of services. It is not a temporary blip IMO - and that illusion or misperception can be lethal to your career.

                            If you do not keep your rates in check with the market you will soon find yourself without any work.

                            I'm not saying Luke should have taken that job -there are limits of course! - but to say that one should just 'advertise' and find better clients is a bit naive. It can be true in a limited way but it's no magic bullet. I know people who are literally world class artists that do work for the biggest budget clients (multi-national clients and global campaigns) and it is not unusual for them to be working at lower rates these day, sometimes much lower.

                            /b
                            Brett Simms

                            www.heavyartillery.com
                            e: brett@heavyartillery.com

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by simmsimaging View Post
                              In principle I agree that you need to hold your value as best you can, but one thing I don't hear a lot of is respecting the market demand. Rates are a balance of what we think our time is worth, and what the market is willing to pay - regardless of our opinion of the value. My feeling is that sometimes you actually need to lower your rates if you are priced out of the market, and rates are falling for most of our type of services. It is not a temporary blip IMO - and that illusion or misperception can be lethal to your career.

                              If you do not keep your rates in check with the market you will soon find yourself without any work.

                              I'm not saying Luke should have taken that job -there are limits of course! - but to say that one should just 'advertise' and find better clients is a bit naive. It can be true in a limited way but it's no magic bullet. I know people who are literally world class artists that do work for the biggest budget clients (multi-national clients and global campaigns) and it is not unusual for them to be working at lower rates these day, sometimes much lower.

                              /b
                              Agreed. I think the key thing is balance. Pricing a job is still the most difficult thing to do in business.
                              Kind Regards,
                              Richard Birket
                              ----------------------------------->
                              http://www.blinkimage.com

                              ----------------------------------->

                              Comment

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