You'd have to account for regional price variations, the industry market potential, the experience of the individual consultant, the number of similar consultants operating in the region, and the 'notoriety' of the consultant in question.
But, making a reasonable guesstimate, the value would be around US$200 per hour - if the consultant is well-known in the industry, has at least fifteen years consulting experience, and an excellent track record.
If the amount of experience is less, or if the degree of notoriety is lower, the amount that will seem reasonable to clients will be proportionately lower ... perhaps as low as US$100 per hour.
And remember that this includes EVERYTHING ... there's no add-ons for travel, materials, accomodations, etc. And hours are only 'billable hours', which means time spent on-site doing the consulting.
2007-02-22 03:20:13
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answer #1
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answered by CanTexan 6
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I used to contract as a ME for OEM companies at between $75-100 per hour in Silicon Valley. EMS companies tend to pay lousy, so I would expect to be below the low end of that range.
2007-02-22 13:29:25
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answer #2
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answered by KB 2
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http://www.4pcba.com/
2017-02-28 05:12:44
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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previous answerer has it suitable. indexed right here are a collection of hourly exertions fees known via the U.S. government universal centers administration for environmental scientists at a small enterprise in Massachusetts: Senior Environmental Scientist $134.seventy 5 undertaking Scientist $80 5.00 team Scientist $seventy 5.00 Environmental Technician $seventy 5.18 as quickly as I even have employed environmental experts, I frequently expected the fee at $a hundred/hr. often times you get tons, often times you pay extra.
2016-12-17 16:08:46
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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You'd have to find sites on that and look. It varies by country and specialization.
2007-02-22 01:57:30
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answer #5
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answered by Gene 7
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