sign design or logo design are the areas I tell clients right off the bat that it is more difficult to quote. I explain that my shop rate is $100 an hour, so I build my design quotes around that number... BUT, the way I actually proceed is like this.
When someone comes in to talk about design work... I let them talk, I answer their questions, and I ask a lot of questions... and I try to see if I think I can help them, if they seem to know what they want, and how much they seem to trust me or appreciate my design work on my samples or my web portfolios... so at this point, I have not agreed to do the work, but I am trying to get a feel if I want to offer them a $500 logo, a $250 redraw of their own concept, or a $150
sign design following their design suggestions...
As for the earlier comments of design being "hard to quote" I explain that I have no control over their happiness with a design, and as much as I want them to be happy, my approach is to talk, then to sketch, then to quote a price. If they are not happy, they need to communicate their concerns as soon as possible, because the quoted price is tied to time, not to their absolute happiness with the outcome.
Most of my logos are $500. Some day they should be $800 - $1000.. but I'm knocking out 4 or 5 hour logos, and times are tough for me & my clients.. so I've done the math & if I make my shop rate, as well as reeling in a happy customer, who brings me all his
sign work & sings my praises.. I don't want to lose these guys by charging too much...
Last logo I posted here some of the designers I look up to mentioned that $500 was a "deal" or even a "steal' for my client... so on the next logo I sold, a few days ago.. I said $600..
...well, wouldn't you know it.. the client said his budget was $500, so I caved pretty quick, and agreed that this would be the number that we would shoot for..
BUT, this comes back to the questions Ontsigngirl posted... I'm not promising the guy he gets a logo he loves for $500... by the time I even say I can help the client, or I say a price, I have discussed the job, heard their ideas, let my own ideas come through & then sketched out some REALLY rough, loose graphic representations of concepts...
...and at this point, I am basically pointing at a sketch they have been drawn to, and saying something like, "If you think you will like an ornamental "panel" shape, with a colored border, ragged script lettering streaking across the top with a drop shadow.. a monogram centered above that, & a small reverse panel with the subcopy... and a little pictorial in an oval at the bottom... like this sketch... then I think I can come up with a few variations on a theme, for $500.. & you would give me half down & I would start doing some half-baked versions on the
computer, after which we will have a second consultation (often by phone or email) where you can give me feedback again.
I remind them that the $500 (or whatever) price is based on my belief that I can do something like the concept discussed in 5 hours. I explain that I never spend the whole 5 hours up front, & then say "here it is,... hope you like it because I blew the whole budget already"...
I always try to hold myself back from completing a logo, and try to just get some different fonts and some different shapes, colors or ideas into 2 or 3 variations.. leaving a good 30 - 40% of the budgeted time available for after the second consultation...
(in truth, if I'm having fun, which I usually am, and if one layout really starts to gel for me... which also usually happens, I might go ahead and "finish" that one.. and then I find myself making a few quick variations of it, with different colors or fonts... thinking this is just because I promised 2 or 3 rough drafts... so I'm trying to bang out 2 losers after finishing one I love... but of course, half the time, one of those variations becomes one I love even more... again, this is especially true if I'm having fun...)
I explain that in the second consultation they might like the colors of one, the fonts of another, and have some changes like relative sizes of copy, or graphic elements.. and they should identify everything they can that they do, or don't like, and 9 times out of 10, the next drawing I show them is a winner, or needs a 15 minute tweak to be complete. I might even mention that if a client really does not like what has been done after the first round of drawings, they might feel like I am not the right designer for this project, and they can cancel the project, paying only for the first half of the work that has been completed. I tell them this has happened maybe twice in 15 years, and there were no hard feelings on either side, because the terms were clear up front.