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Depends what you are currently on, kind of a how long is a piece of string question.I was thinking £1.50 to £2 increase per hour. Would that seem reasonable?
Perhaps I'm guilty of assumption here. Specifically assuming that:Some of the replies here just illustrate to me how this country is losing its way. This ideology that as the OP hasn’t increased her freelance rates for three years well she is due at least 25% then is utter BS. Perhaps a union or pay review body is needed ehh??!
The U.K. is just becoming uncompetitive by the day and this ridiculous ideology over pay, led by our new lefty government just fuels it.
Look it’s simple business here. It’s supply and demand based on not what she thinks she wants, or should get 25%, why not 100% and back date it for three years, perhaps go back to work done three years ago and re-invoice that higher, no, it’s what that service is worth to the actual person or company paying the bill and what they can afford. There is a worldwide market of suppliers out there.
If she puts rates up to a ridiculous level she risks losing the contract, her clients outsourcing the work elsewhere. There are plenty of hungry mouths out there ready to take her work on. Also, the very businesses she supplies are equally under pressure, the climate is ugly out there imo unless you work in the public sector and oblivious to it.
My advice would be not to whack her rates up so she becomes uncompetitive but to look at what others supply her clients at and ask for an average smaller moderate increase now based on that and be flexible. If the client can’t afford the increase be flexible enough to compromise. She can always look to annually increase in the following year by a few percent. If she hasn’t increased her rates for three years then she can justify why an uplift is in order but not to get greedy is my view. She can always look to add other new clients at higher rates if she can secure them? But a big increase on no future work if they go elsewhere won’t benefit. Tread carefully is my view.