I'd be careful. If you wrote that during company time at the last company then (depending on paperwork signed) they likely own the application and source. So taking it and reselling it, even with extra features/rebranding may be breaking a legally binding contract.
As for rate, that is always something to be negotiated between you and the employer. I tend to give clients I like working with and projects I like working on lower rates (than my midline) so I encourage continuing work with them. The inverse is also true, clients I don't like working with or projects I don't like working on I aim higher to get my time's worth since I am doing something that I don't want to continue doing but if they are willing to pay me extra I'll keep working on it. The trick is finding your value, which varies from person to person how much they think their time and skills are worth, especially within the context of another company. My suggestion, if you don't think you'll scare them off and they are business people who know how to negotiate, aim a bit higher, let them negotiate you down a little bit. As Mr. Sheen would say 'Bi-winning' you feel like you are getting as much as you are worth, they feel like they got a deal too since they talked you down a bit. If they aren't business types, then aim for what you want, chances are they wont challenge it unless they have to. -Chris 'Wraithan' McDonald On Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 10:33 AM, Josh English <[email protected]> wrote: > At my last job I created a time clock program to make my life easier. > I gave it to a different department, too. Then, last July, I was > canned. > > Programming was not part of my job description at the time. > > Now a third department wants to use my program and they want a few > extra features added to it. I've been asked to come back as a contract > employee to get it set up. > > I suspect this will take me a day or two, probably over the weekend. I > can't imagine this will take more than four hours. > > What is an acceptable rate to charge these people? > > Here's some more context: My wife works for this third department. I > sometimes work as a math tutor (high-school algebra to college > calculus) at $20/hr. > > My degree is in education. > > Any suggestions? I'm not going to say no, I just want to know what's > market-rate fair. > > -- > Josh English > [email protected] > http://joshenglish.livejournal.com > _______________________________________________ > Portland mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland > _______________________________________________ Portland mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland
