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I think that the going rate thing depends on who you hire. Some solicitors charge more than others. Long and short of it if your on page one and your happy with the results and you are making a profit and your happy with the ROI then enjoy the ride.
In short though - cost per unit should not alter, volume of units (and therefore) cost can. At least that is my take on things.
Ali-v-8 said:when you consider that the average claim gets a minimum of £500 how much would you be willing to pay to be in their position right now.
sirearl said:I am not going to charge a company making millions the same as one making a few thousand.
sirearl said:Value of the work done is exactly how one should charge Unless you enjoy making other people rich whilst living in a tent yourself.
RadiusBPO said:Affiliate, are you saying we should only charge by hours worked?
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I don't charge an hourly rate or by any quantity.
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SEO pricing should be all about the returns
Yesterday I spent in hospital, today a bit of R&R, yet my sites bought in a tidy income. What hourly rate do you think would be fair for me to charge a business for doing something similar?I don't disagree with making a profit and enjoying the ROI, but I do completely disagree with businesses getting ripped off and paying more than they should be for work which isn't being done.
I'm sure when the MD of Ford has a day in hospital they stop charging for their carsWhile you are on "R&R", I'd say a rate of £0 would be perfectly fair![]()
Charge for the time you're working, don't charge when you're not.
I don't disagree with making a profit and enjoying the ROI, but I do completely disagree with businesses getting ripped off and paying more than they should be for work which isn't being done.
I'm sure when the MD of Ford has a day in hospital they stop charging for their cars
A business is in business to make a profit. Do you think the cost of your car reflects in any way an hourly rate? How about the insurance policy you took out on it?
Neither does running a business on the basis of an hourly rate...That comparison makes no sense at all.
It seems to work just fine for accountants, plumbers, building labourers, dog walkers, solicitors, surveyors, gardeners and everyone else offering a service. How exactly is SEO any different?
So if an seo comes in and increases a companies profits from £1m a year to £1.2m a year, and takes 2 full working days to do it how much should he be paid?
Then if you bring in an accountant who manages to save you £200k off your tax bill, should he be paid on a similar sort of deal to the seo?
Yes, the city is full of multi million pound dog walkers...It seems to work just fine for accountants, plumbers, building labourers, dog walkers, solicitors, surveyors, gardeners and everyone else offering a service. How exactly is SEO any different?
Totally agree.As long as the business owner and the SEO are both happy then all should be well.
Yes, the city is full of multi million pound dog walkers...All of those do a job and that's the end of it. An SEO's work continues to earn long after he's done.
If someone offers to increase a businesses bottom line by 100k pa for the price of 20k, then it matters not how many hours that someone takes. It's a no brainer for the business.
Same argument goes for the hourly worker who sits at his desk twiddling his thumbs looking busy to make up the hours...Well that depends... if you only got £1k of work done it wasn't such a good deal any more was it?
Don't know about you, but I've always over delivered...
Because I'm paid enough that never happens...If you think you should be paid a chunk of the upside forever, would it be fair to assume you also are happy to take on the downside also, and write the clients blank cheques in case you harm their rankings?
My gripe is with the SEOs in this thread thinking it's justifiable to charge different rates to different clients (well, pro-rata anyway).
Why wait? Have a read of the 4 hour work week - should be required reading for all REAL businessmenI want to retire early, and I want to do all my hard work while I can.
Hi all,
Just wanted to ask what are typically the rates to hire a SEO consultant to do on page and off page optimisation?
Hourly Rate, Monthly and Packages.
Would love to hear from some of the SEO Experts on the forum on what they would normally charge to a average client.
Thanks![]()
So we are looking at the Polish Plasterer scenario.
The do the same job but cheaper.
Good reason to use them I suppose.....Until you have a problem.
I know a number of companies that use Indian outsourced work and although some do get a good result a majority ring and tell you of the nightmare they are having.
If you are an SEO with loads of experience, you will want either a biggish fee for services rendered, and / or a % of future income.
If I translate that to web design, If I build a website for a £1,000 its actually £1,000 to begin with, there will be a residual payment every year that website is in existance, and then if I take that further, even if the website isn't in existance I should still get paid every year because I built the website and its not my fault that its no longer active.
I seem to remember one of the members of Queen wrote one of their biggest hits on the back of a fag packet on their way to a concert... Does that mean they should have given that song away for free?I may be flippant, but when I get a bag of chips, I don't expect to keep paying for those chips long after they've passed through me...
Sorry Baz, but I'm not wanting to be misquoted.
I charge according to the deal put on the table.
If the deal is a percentage or JV or simple a bag of chips scenario, it is discussed and laid bare at the onset of the campaign.
When you mention websites its a fixed item. it may get plugins or addons that can be quoted for at a fixed predictable rate.
SEO on the other hand varies.
I would not charge my national loan client the same as my local skip hire client.
The skip hire was done dusted and happy in a matter of weeks.
The loan company is a pain in the buttski and requires constant monitoring blah blah blah.
Skip guy spent £2,000 for everything. Website hosting and SEO.
Would any one charge a loan company the same.
I know a few SEOs who make a local business website, rank it and then rent it for a monthly fee. It makes sense to the business because the monthly fee is substantially less than building and ranking their own site and the leads they get are worth more than they pay in rental. Do a few of these and you've got your residual income. If you're really clever you might even outsource the work to people like yourself who charge a one off fee to build the site
Stop thinking in terms of a job and start thinking in terms of a business... You must offer a service or product that people (or businesses) want at a price that they see value and that makes you a profit. The higher the profit the better. If both parties are satisfied then all is well with the world and it matters not how many or how few hours you put into it.
I'm not arguing with you there. I'm arguing that you are not in any way restricted to charging by the number of hours you put into something. The only criteria is, are you offering more value than you are charging...But charging for work that isnt done is wrong.
If I translate that to web design, If I build a website for a £1,000 its actually £1,000 to begin with, there will be a residual payment every year that website is in existance, and then if I take that further, even if the website isn't in existance I should still get paid every year because I built the website and its not my fault that its no longer active.
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Different senario.
A website is worth nothing unless it produces income or results.
Hence why SEO's can charge an ongoing fee for ongoing sales.E.t.c.
Earl