tankman1989
Active Member
- Reaction score
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I recently took some time off from the computer field meaning that I didn't even do anything technical with my personal computers. All I did was surf the web, use Office and photoshop or paint once in a while. I did this b/c I was burnt out on computers and I felt that I had very little marketable skills and was wondering what my market rate should be.
I found a number of things very interesting after about 6-8 months of little admin work or technical work.
I found myself becoming very frustrated with little issues like dropped connections, windows updates, acrobat updates, flash plugins and other software issues. I just HATED every aspect of having to install them and run them (oh I also setup my user as a "limited access" user instead of an Admin acct). I was still able to install software as I was the admin but I had to run the software "as administrator" This in itself could generate service calls for help with installation(s).
I became very frustrated with slow internet speeds and times with no connection and I would not take time to trouble shoot as I couldn't stand talking to a "tech support" person at my hated ISP.
In short I got a brief glimpse into how I imagine most non computer savvy people feel on any given day but probably to a lesser degree. Unless they are REALLY interested in finding out WHY & HOW the computer/OS does what it does most people just want it to work and are willing to pay for a machine that does this. They probably feel a lot of anxiety when doing something like a system migration, OS upgrade/repair/reinstall. Virus's, trojans and malware are a real PITA and worth paying someone to clean them up.
Before this little "sabbatical" of mine, I felt that much of the services I had to offer were difficult to guage a market price as I thought that many people could do the work easily themselves. The fact is, all services are this way (auto mechanic - changing oil is SOOOO EASY!!!) and you should treat yourself with the respect you deserve and you are due. I realized that just because a process or procedure is extremely simple for you does not mean others know anything, or want to know anything, about what you are doing. They just want it fixed and not have to worry about it themselves.
I don't know if this makes any sense to anyone but I have seen so many people undercutting themselves with pricing, probably because they either really need business or they feel that what they are doing is very simple.
If you work as a professional then you should charge a professional rate. I like to think about the attorney who charges $3,000 for forming an LLC for their client. This can be done for ~$120 in most states and maybe a $70 fictitious name license as well. It is incredibly simple and do you think they tell people "oh you can do it online and save $2,800!"?
Anyway I just thought I would make this post after doing some thinking about how I felt while acting like a non-techie.
LMK what you think about these "feelings".
I found a number of things very interesting after about 6-8 months of little admin work or technical work.
I found myself becoming very frustrated with little issues like dropped connections, windows updates, acrobat updates, flash plugins and other software issues. I just HATED every aspect of having to install them and run them (oh I also setup my user as a "limited access" user instead of an Admin acct). I was still able to install software as I was the admin but I had to run the software "as administrator" This in itself could generate service calls for help with installation(s).
I became very frustrated with slow internet speeds and times with no connection and I would not take time to trouble shoot as I couldn't stand talking to a "tech support" person at my hated ISP.
In short I got a brief glimpse into how I imagine most non computer savvy people feel on any given day but probably to a lesser degree. Unless they are REALLY interested in finding out WHY & HOW the computer/OS does what it does most people just want it to work and are willing to pay for a machine that does this. They probably feel a lot of anxiety when doing something like a system migration, OS upgrade/repair/reinstall. Virus's, trojans and malware are a real PITA and worth paying someone to clean them up.
Before this little "sabbatical" of mine, I felt that much of the services I had to offer were difficult to guage a market price as I thought that many people could do the work easily themselves. The fact is, all services are this way (auto mechanic - changing oil is SOOOO EASY!!!) and you should treat yourself with the respect you deserve and you are due. I realized that just because a process or procedure is extremely simple for you does not mean others know anything, or want to know anything, about what you are doing. They just want it fixed and not have to worry about it themselves.
I don't know if this makes any sense to anyone but I have seen so many people undercutting themselves with pricing, probably because they either really need business or they feel that what they are doing is very simple.
If you work as a professional then you should charge a professional rate. I like to think about the attorney who charges $3,000 for forming an LLC for their client. This can be done for ~$120 in most states and maybe a $70 fictitious name license as well. It is incredibly simple and do you think they tell people "oh you can do it online and save $2,800!"?
Anyway I just thought I would make this post after doing some thinking about how I felt while acting like a non-techie.
LMK what you think about these "feelings".