Dia Media

  • Home
  • Blog

Pricing – to Share or Not to Share

May 8, 2019 by MzD

So I wrote this draft so long ago, it’s comical. And it doesn’t really end. But my thoughts remain similar. For giggles, I’m going to publish it, seeing as I’ve just turned comments off and it no longer will be a magnet for all that noise. Instead it will hopefully push me to blog more and start that workshop on pricing I want to do. Cheers.”

Just give me Money
Just give me Money

Money is a really delicate subject. More so amongst Canadians than Americans, if my personal small sampling counts as an accurate take on the pulse of money.  Probably a leftover from our Rule Brittania days, stiff upper lip and all that colonizer madness.

I’ve read blogs and books that strongly advocate to never disclose your pricing in your marketing materials when you’re in the service industry (this obviously would not be the strategy if your business is a restaurant) and also read the exact opposite advice – that showing your prices attracts clients.

We had a pricing blurb up for a while – I think it attracted bottom feeders.

Recently a programmer we work with told me he is going to raise his rates. I was not surprised, in fact, I wondered why he hadn’t done this sooner. On the other hand, when I compare him with another professional we work with, whose rates were triple that of the programmer (on an hourly basis) in fact what I noticed is that overall for the job the rates were the same. That is to say, the chap charging triple rates was definitely not billing for every hour, whereas the one with the lower rates was. So in the end, on a given project, the amount they each billed out came out the same.

What’s important is the value. They both provided us with equal and great value. However they worked out the math is up to them. How we dealt with the unknown is to put milestone and caps in place. ie: when you’ve reached x amount of hours = $1k let us know, before we start piling on more feature requests and then we’ll see if it’s worth it, and then we can translate that to the client. If they have a super small budget, it won’t be worth it. If they have some latitude, but want to control costs, they can be happy knowing the details.

I’ve seen website designers say, well “we can design a site for $2,000 or you can add (insert x amount of zeroes)  and we can design that too.” Which, I know really only irritates clients, and yet of course it is truthful. I do wonder however, about such a range. If you’re used to doing sites for less than $10K can you really and truly handle a $100K project just like that? Bring it on!😉  Chances are you don’t immediately have the resources available to scale up to that size. Which doesn’t mean you can’t, just that if you’re honest with yourself, your small company (2-5 employees eg) isn’t really competing with an ad agency that offers services in London, New York and Dubai, and employs 500 people.

If a designer (or coach, or photographer) doesn’t immediately reveal their prices on their website, it might be because the reverse question should be openly asked to potential clients – what is your budget? No beating around the bush, no apology. A knowledgeable designer should not respond to the answer, “About $10K” with a quote that neatly caps out at $9,900 and explains nothing. Add (or subtract) zeroes as you wish. Ultimately the sharing of pricing will come with a list of features attached.  You want to save $2K – dump the customized widget that you think is really cool, but ultimately isn’t going to help your business.

Mini update 2021

Reading these thoughts now reminds me that things always shift. I used to see frequent pricing for site-maintenance (specifically WordPress) in the $25 – $99 per month range. Now I see that AI handles the job, and it’s $8/ month. There’s absolutely zero point trying to compete with AI. Unless you’re truly trying to differentiate the hands-on / eyes-on the page service. Most companies would have that sorted in-house though, no?

Filed Under: General, Work Tagged With: money, pricing, value, website costs

Time For A Re-Design To Re-Align…

September 30, 2014 by MzD

FIT

That was my choice for my annual #WordOfTheYear . It’s basically the last quarter of the year, and it’s time to review how the word is fitting in, so to speak:)

The concept behind this*  is that when the New Year begins, rather than make a resolution (or several) that are proverbially doomed to fail come February 1st, you select one word that sums up the tone/intention you want to set for the year. Fit felt right for the usual suspect (wanting to get in better shape etc) and, equally so, to be a gauge word for helping me (or us as company) decide what projects to take on, where to place creative efforts and so on.

So far, it’s been a year whereby a long-standing art project has eaten up a huge amount of time. The app “soft-launch” was just this weekend past (see lulusuite.ca), and as this project comes to an end, other client projects still need tending and cultivating. So the luxury of choosing what projects might be a good fit still feels a bit in the future. That said, part of FIT is to eventually re-design so that our values (aesthetic, business, technical, quirks and quarks…) shine through and attract the right clients and projects that are the best fit for us and the client.

Soon come. Soon come.

======================================

Laundry List of Questions to Consider for a Site Re-design

  1. WHY

    First of all Why do you want / need a re-design?
    You might say, “well, our site is not mobile-responsive (if you know what that means) or it needs to be mobile-friendly”. But perhaps what you really mean, is you are losing customers, because a huge proportion of your visitors (you’re tracking them right?) are on mobile devices, and when they land on your site they can’t read anything, so off they go, to another site.

    Another Why might be that your business has changed in some fundamental way – from services to products, from offering workshops to selling e-books – you get the picture. If the content is so out of date (especially if you can’t edit that content) that it no longer reflects your core business, that’s a fairly compelling Why.

  2. WHAT

    What materials do I need to get ready? Which might include:  New larger, magnificent photographs of us, our products, our zeitgest….
    Photographs do have a higher conversion rate than plain text, which is not to say, copy ain’t crucial. That’s also no doubt on your list.  Copy. Hire a writer. Hire a translator. Hire us.

  3. WHERE

    Which is really still WHY. Can people find your site? Maybe it doesn’t matter. You’re a small business and you only need your site to support those business cards you hand out. Still, wouldn’t it be nice if a local search, using the terms that fit your business, turned up your site in the results?

  4. WHO

    Who are doing this for?
    Who is your target audience? Not just a 18-34 man, or 44-53 woman, or an 81-89 senior. What are their values, their habits, their raison d’etre?

  5. WHEN

    When was the last time your site was updated? 2011? 2007? If it’s been a few years, it probably needs a re-do for reasons like the first – WHY > Answer > Mobile technology has changed they way most of our customers view our website.
    Also – when do you want this to be done. Map out a timeline.

Art is Long, Life Is Short

 

 

(Art is Long – Life is Short)

*(inspired by singer/songwriter Christine Kane and others)

Filed Under: General, Process Tagged With: fit, process, redesign, time managment

Are you mobile friendly?

Recently

  • Pricing – to Share or Not to Share
  • Comments Off … Radio Silence
  • Why Is It So Challenging To Estimate Time?
  • 2017 Word of The Year
  • End of Year Lists
Create your own visual style... let it be unique for yourself and yet identifiable for others. —Orson Welles

The Vault

  • Home
  • Journal

© 2025 · Dia Media | Website Strategy & Design in Vancouver, BC