Average Rate for Emergency Service
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@jaredbusch Do you also have a rate for a drop everything and fix my shit for a non-existing client?
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@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@jaredbusch Do you also have a rate for a drop everything and fix my shit for a non-existing client?
Meh, never has come up.
I would have to discuss it with the owner, but I could see doing it for either the same or maybe $300. But would require an up front CC payment of 2 hours.
I'm totally not sorry either. If we have no relationship, I am not going to trust you to pay us later.
@Bundy-Associates is not a company with overhead to let someone blow time working on something and not get paid for it.
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@jaredbusch It's agreed on up front, and it's for something I already asked you to let me do.
For example:
Me: You should replace all your switches, they are 10 year old, and end of life.
Them: Nah, they work fine.
<later>
Them: Our network is down. Come fix it!
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@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@jaredbusch It's agreed on up front, and it's for something I already asked you to let me do.
For example:
Me: You should replace all your switches, they are 10 year old, and end of life.
Them: Nah, they work fine.
<later>
Them: Our network is down. Come fix it!
That's just a bad customer who isn't taking their paid recommendation seriously. It's on them later to deal with the consequences.
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@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
It's on them later to deal with the consequences.They do pay the consequences, at $300/hour
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@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@jaredbusch It's agreed on up front, and it's for something I already asked you to let me do.
For example:
Me: You should replace all your switches, they are 10 year old, and end of life.
Them: Nah, they work fine.
<later>
Them: Our network is down. Come fix it!
That's just a bad customer who isn't taking their paid recommendation seriously. It's on them later to deal with the consequences.
Technically everything is preventable, so this should always be the rate.
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@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
It's on them later to deal with the consequences.They do pay for the consequences, at $300/hour
Not true.
@jaredbusch said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@jaredbusch It's agreed on up front, and it's for something I already asked you to let me do.
For example:
Me: You should replace all your switches, they are 10 year old, and end of life.
Them: Nah, they work fine.
<later>
Them: Our network is down. Come fix it!
That's just a bad customer who isn't taking their paid recommendation seriously. It's on them later to deal with the consequences.
Technically everything is preventable, so this should always be the rate.
This is why.
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@jaredbusch said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
Preventable Emergency $300/Hour
Sorry, will never hire, because this can only be subjectively rerated post service call.
And really... what emergency wasn't preventable with enough investment or hindsight?
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Customer: I need a new PBX, I know you have your FreePBX thing but I really want a box in my server room.
Jared: That's a bad idea for reasons XYZ
Customer: Thanks for your opinion, here is your hour. Now install my box into my server room, thanks.
Jared: OKAYIt isn't Jared's place to overcharge for supporting something that he knowingly supported as his business. His rate is his rate.
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@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@jaredbusch It's agreed on up front, and it's for something I already asked you to let me do.
For example:
Me: You should replace all your switches, they are 10 year old, and end of life.
Them: Nah, they work fine.
<later>
Them: Our network is down. Come fix it!
Still remains subjective. Prove that new switches could not have failed. They will argue that maybe they prevented other outages by not listening to you.
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@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
Customer: I need a new PBX, I know you have your FreePBX thing but I really want a box in my server room.
Jared: That's a bad idea for reasons XYZ
Customer: Thanks for your opinion, here is your hour. Now install my box into my server room, thanks.
Jared: OKAYIt isn't Jared's place to overcharge for supporting something that he knowingly supported as his business. His rate is his rate.
Exactly, the higher rate is already there for the emergency. Double punishing makes no sense, especially as everything could be avoided, in theory.
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@jaredbusch said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@aaronstuder said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
@jaredbusch It's agreed on up front, and it's for something I already asked you to let me do.
For example:
Me: You should replace all your switches, they are 10 year old, and end of life.
Them: Nah, they work fine.
<later>
Them: Our network is down. Come fix it!
That's just a bad customer who isn't taking their paid recommendation seriously. It's on them later to deal with the consequences.
Technically everything is preventable, so this should always be the rate.
And if it required recommendations, we'd "recommend" crazy high end gear and HA and redundancy for absolutely everything so that even if we missed something, it would have been covered somewhere.
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The rates should be defined long before the call ever comes in.
Contracted customers: $150/hour non-emergency
Contracted Customer: $175/hour for emergencyExisting non-contracted: $250/hour emergency
Non-existing Customer - I assume would fall into the same category as the existing non-contracted rate. With a follow-up of, "You really should get a support contract with us, it would've saved you X/hour for this"
(all numbers made up)
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I had to restore AD that was corrupted. Move files share drives etc. over 80+ hours in. I dont want to scare them off either.
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@mroth911 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
I had to restore AD that was corrupted. Move files share drives etc. over 80+ hours in. I dont want to scare them off either.
WOW, so you started work without a contract in place?
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The rate is the rate. Either you can do the job or you can't.
Rate starts counting from the time you get the call.And as normal, higher rate for non-business hours. Extra high rate for holidays.
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Now, just to ask you aren't charging them a full hour for checking in on the file migration while it moves from wherever it is now to the new location.
That's like .10 hours every two hours and its for monitoring the situation. Since you aren't actively "working" on anything during that time.
As for the rate you're discussing this depends on the few factors already discussed. Is this an existing customer, non-existing customer?
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@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
Now, just to ask you aren't charging them a full hour for checking in on the file migration while it moves from wherever it is now to the new location.
Depends, is it mixed in with other tasks? Does it interfere with other work? Is it necessary to keep things moving for the customer to maximize their recovery? Would an employee need to be paid doing the same work?
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@dustinb3403 said in Average Rate for Emergency Service:
That's like .10 hours every two hours and its for monitoring the situation. Since you aren't actively "working" on anything during that time.
Monitoring is as much work as anything else. An employee gets paid the same whether doing tasks or monitoring those tasks. Consultants don't work for free just because it doesn't include certain types of work. All work is billable work.
It's a simple equation...
Does the work require the person doing it be paid? Then likewise the customer needs to be billed.
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If you didn't have a contract in place ahead of time and you started work, there's little that can be done. Just try to work something out. Hopefully you can talk them into $125.