Originally Posted by
TimPaul
As a professional illustrator, in which making maps for books for publishing and gaming companies, you should charge what you feel your work is worth to you. Which should be a decent price.
The best advice I've ever heard on pricing art work came from the President of The Society of Illustrators, Tim O'Brian.
"I can't tell you want to charge, I can only tell you what works for me."
The amount of work you are going to do on a map is going to be the same regardless of who it's for. If you charge $200 for a private commission and have tons of information and details, that's a lot of work, isn't it? In general, from a publishing company, I get between $600-$1000 for a one page black and white map. I retain the copyright, and grant them exclusive life time ENGLISH rights. Meaning, they can reprint the map with the book forever, without paying me anything more. If they reuse it in another context, they pay a reuse fee, and if another publisher wants to publish a foreign language edition of the book with the map, the new publisher pays me a reuse fee. Which is generally 50% of the original price.
For private commissions, I won't go below $500 anymore, simply because the projects tend to take up way to much time and end up stretching out far too long. I had one that took 7 months to complete, with me sending emails ever few weeks.
Personally, I'd take down that commissions page, because each project should be a conversation between you and the client, rather than trying to template the process. Yes, you should have a basic structure, and you've got that on the site, which is good to have something like that. But it should be customized to each client. When you have things spelled out, it can turn people away. What you want is to open and inviting to people approaching you.
I've walked away from many commissions because the client only wanted to spend a few hundred dollars and own the copyright. No. In fact I had an award winning maker of liquors contact me about a map. They wanted an interactive map with icons for their website, and wanted to own it, for $1,000. Way to little. We went back and forth, and I explained why that wasn't a good deal for me. and got a much higher payment.
Again, you have to decide what your work is worth and stick to that. It might mean loosing a client or two, but it's worth it if you make a living at it, or even supplement your living. I generally do about 1.5 maps per month in addition to other illustration work and character design.