Content creation rates

Hii! Just need some help trying to figure out rates for content creation. I am a beginner but I have done a course and have a portfolio set up so now I finally have my first client. They offered me £200 however that includes a shooting day which was 5 hours long and they’d like me to edit 7 short videos and offer edited photos as well. Ik I’m just getting started so everything is taking me a while to edit but am I being absurd for now thinking that £200 for all of this is very little even though I understand I’m just getting started?

Comments

wesdacarabout 1 month ago2

£200 for a 5 hour shoot plus 7 edited short videos and photos sounds very light, even for a first client. The issue is that they are bundling three jobs together: shoot day, video editing, and photo delivery.

For this one, since you already have the client, I’d probably protect the scope instead of trying to renegotiate everything midstream. Something like: “For this package I can include the 5 hour shoot, 7 short edited clips, and X edited photos, with one revision round. Anything beyond that would be a separate quote.”

Then use the real hours from this project to price the next one. If it takes you 5 hours shooting + 10 hours editing, £200 is not a beginner rate, it is a learning-fee project. That is okay once, but you do not want it to become your published rate.

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Hrushikesh_1187about 1 month ago1

£200 sounds low even for a beginner if that includes a 5-hour shoot, 7 edited videos, and edited photos. The issue isn't just your experience level, it's the amount of work involved.

I'd calculate roughly how many hours you'll spend from shooting through final delivery. A lot of new creators accidentally end up earning less than minimum wage because they price based on confidence instead of time. Taking the project for experience is one thing, but make sure you're aware of what your effective hourly rate actually is.

PeachEffective413130 days ago1

£200 feels pretty low tbh.

You've got a 5 hour shoot 7 edited short form videos, and edited photos on top of that. Even if you're just starting out, that's a decent amount of work once you factor in shooting editing revisions exporting file delivery etc. When I first started freelancing, I definitely undercharged a few projects just to build a portfolio and get testimonials but I'd still want the rate to make sense for the hours involved. If this project ends up taking you 12 to 15+ hours total, you're working for well under minimum wage. if it's a client you really want to work with I'd probably treat it as a portfolio building project, deliver great work and then use it as a case study to justify higher rates going forward. Also as a general rule try to separate shooting and editing into different line items. Makes pricing conversations a lot easier as you grow.

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