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Susanto:
You just need more cameras for more angles and more audio sources. If you have enough of each to pick from, you have a lot easier time of it. Jason: I understand where you are coming from, but IMO you have been way too inexpensive in the past and even now. Forget what you think you are worth starting out, step up and charge close to your market area prices right away or it just makes it harder on everyone. If you have $10K worth of gear (2 cams & wireless & digital audio gear and PC, etc.) and figure a 3 year depreciation, it's $166 per wedding (20 weddings a year) for equipment depreciation plus your hard costs before you even look at profitability. |
Thank you everyone for all the comments!!! I really appreciate them and you've all helped out a great deal! Thanks again!
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OK here's the thing. Someone in Virgina or Texas or Chicago would be hard pressed to suggest a starting price for Detroit. Each market is unique in it's demographics and economy so it would be nearly impossible to guess what you should be charging starting out in the business.
My suggestion would be to look at other videographers in your area see what their pricing is and what they offer for that money and adjust your pricing accordingly. Google would be your friend for this. Remember not everyone posts their prices but enough do so you should be able to get a good read for that. remember it's not just pricing but what the client gets for that price. Don't be blasted by the really cheap people nor by the top most expensive people. Actually I would take the cheapest and the most expensive toss them and average out the rest then adjust you prices to that. |
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