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Going IT Alone: The Handbook for Freelance and Contract Software Developers

You're reading from   Going IT Alone: The Handbook for Freelance and Contract Software Developers A detailed guide to self-employment for software and web developers - from identifying your target market, through to managing your time, finances, and client behavior

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783001408
Length 376 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Leon Brown Leon Brown
Author Profile Icon Leon Brown
Leon Brown
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Going IT Alone: The Handbook for Freelance and Contract Software Developers
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewer
Preface
1. Introducing Freelancing 2. Positioning Yourself in the Market FREE CHAPTER 3. Defining Your Business Model 4. Creating a Brand 5. Networking, Marketing, and Sales 6. An Introduction to Client Types 7. Managing Clients 8. Negotiation 9. Software Development Resources, Patterns and Strategies 10. Software Development Methodology 11. Creating Quotes and Estimates 12. Project Management Appendix

Product life cycle


Relevant to business models that rely on selling a product or service that can only be sold once, the product life cycle describes each stage that the product goes through, from beginning to end. Understanding these stages allows you to identify where your product is currently positioned regarding its profitability so that you can anticipate upcoming sales and prepare to take action for when sales and profit start to decline.

Figure 3.3: The stages of the product life cycle in relation to time, profit and loss.

Development

The first stage of the product life cycle is the development of the product. As indicated in Figure 3.3, the development phase is created at a loss. In real projects, there may be a steeper increase of losses generated by the software development before costs start to decrease toward the end of the product development.

Key trends:

  • Increasing losses occurred through development costs

  • Extensions to development due to missed deadlines and/or unknown factors

Introduction...

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