@Morris_Mty@FormuMix@hugues_sion Acá tenes todas las que le hicieron a Argentina, incluido el penal a Mc Allister , que le pega en el tobillo. Pero esto los cojidos como vos no lo ven jajs
I've worked on marketing projects worth over ₦4 million in a month for a brand with more than 30 million users across Europe this year.
I have a seven-figure contract on the side.
I've also worked on products like Webtoon, a platform with over 100 million users globally.
Just last month, a company with more than 150 million users reached out and wanted to get on a call with me.
This year I took a job of 200k too lmao 🤣
Now here's the question.
Does any of that mean I should reject a ₦200k project because I've handled bigger ones?
No.
If the project fits my schedule, the expectations are clear, and the scope matches the budget, I'm taking it.
I'm not leaving money on the table because you lot on here says I should.
That's why I find the pricing conversations on this app interesting.
Some people speak as if every freelancer wakes up to five inbound clients every week. That's simply not reality.
Some people haven't landed a client in six months. Half the year is already gone. Bills don't stop because you're waiting for the "perfect" client.
If someone gets a ₦150k or ₦200k website project they can confidently deliver, why should they reject it?
There has never been one universal price in tech.
Never.
From the beginning of freelancing, people have charged different rates based on their experience, location, network, demand, portfolio, confidence, and financial situation.
A beginner with three projects in their portfolio cannot price the same way as someone with ten years of experience.
Someone with no clients for months will negotiate differently from someone turning down projects every week.
Neither person is wrong.
Pricing is contextual.
Lower pricing has always existed. It is one of the oldest customer acquisition strategies in business.
Now, should you underprice yourself forever?
Absolutely not.
As your skills improve, your portfolio grows, your reputation strengthens, and demand increases, your prices should increase too.
That's how sustainable freelancing works.
But expecting everyone to charge premium rates regardless of their experience or circumstances is disconnected from reality.
If you've built a personal brand where clients happily pay premium prices, congratulations. You earned that position.
Keep charging what you're worth.
Instead of attacking people for what they charge, teach them how to increase their value, negotiate better, find higher-paying clients, and eventually raise their rates.