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Taame2019-01-23 10:46:32
Freelance
Taame, 2019-01-23 10:46:32

What about the 30 page layout?

Hello. Agreed to the layout of the site - 32 pages for 10k. rub. (fixed rate). Description: "The site itself is not complicated (advertising board) and is essentially divided into two sections: for registered users and unregistered. The 1st, in turn, includes two types of users, let's call them P1 and P2. P1 can only view ads and write questions P2 P2 copy of P1 + function add announcement As for the second section, it consists of 20 pages includes 3 search sections (i.e. search in 3 sections) = 9 almost identical pages (difference in 4-5 fields) ." There is a real difference in 4-5 fields. "Next pages: Login, Password recovery (3 pages), Registration P1 and P2, Public page P2. PS: header and footer are the same on all pages + there are AxureRp files for understanding the work of some elements,
Actually the question is, is the rate adequate for the layout of such a layout? I ask because I don’t really want to sell cheap, but I don’t want to bully either. I understand that everyone has different rates for work
and for many it is cheap, but still, if possible, I would like to get an answer.
PS: This is the first time I've come across this way of naming layers in Photoshop. The customer named the layers depending on the name of the element. For example: page-container; href etc.

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2 answer(s)
M
Mikhail Proskurin, 2019-01-23
@mixail_fet

You ask the question "how much" before you ask the question "how long", these two parameters are interconnected. It doesn’t matter how many pages, how many layers and icons, it matters how much you do it all. Regarding the timing, you will be able to calculate the price for the project, based on your hourly rate.
For example, the average rate of a Front-End developer is 500 rubles / hour, 80 - 90 tr / month (according to data in my circle ). Regarding this, determine your approximate skills and fix a certain rate for yourself.

A
Andrey Andreev, 2019-01-23
@b0nn1e

Hello. Agreed to layout.

You may not read further.
Price for work = (approximate number of working hours * desired hourly rate) + 20%

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