Charging a service

Member for

19 years 10 months

Hi Ali



That is more or less how I got to be a delay analyst - but when I started there were no books or downloads to teach me.



I still beleive that I invented the Impacted as Planned method of analysis.



Keep going at it.



Best regards



Mike Testro

Member for

17 years

Thanks Mike,

this is exactly what i have done. Some blamed me for starting the work without knowing what will i be paid, but i thought the experience is the best reward at this moment.

I have finished the task, but 10x thanks for offering help

i downloaded a pdf file from aace "forensic schedule analysis" i started to read it. is it a good reference?



Best Regards,

Member for

19 years 10 months

Hi Ali



You are being asked to do a delay analyst work.



If this is the first time you have been asked to do it then grab the chance and make the best of it.



Do not try to charge extra until you have learnt how to do it.



If you need some basic advice as to how to proceed then let me have more details and I will do my best.



Best regards



Mike Testro

Member for

19 years 5 months

I would suggest the 20% includes holidays, taxes and contigency when not being in employment. So you may want to increase that figure abit.

Member for

22 years 6 months

See what a planners gets paid in your country per hr add 20% and charge him per hr spent. The 20% is to cover consumables such as Ink, internet cost, electricity, equipment used and wear and tear. 20% is not a greedy rate so I think you would get more work



Good luck