this post was submitted on 09 Nov 2023
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What types of websites do you build for more than $5,000?

What do you charge for monthly maintenance?

How do you advertise/get clients?

How did you start out your business?

Other people that don't fit the criteria feel free to chime in about your business as well.

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[–] Citrous_Oyster@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (44 children)

I sell static brochure sites for $3500. 5 pages. Every page after that is $100 per page. $500 fee to add a blog. Shopify e-commerce sites start at $8k.

I’ve done a few $5k+ sites because of the blog and extra page fees. They’re just static pages. Information only. They don’t have apps or booking or anything inside of it.

Lump sum sites have a $25 a month hosting and general Maintenance fee. Hourly rate for edits.

I offer an upsell for $80 a month for unlimited edits, 24/7 support, lifetime updates, etc.

Or

Subscription sites cost $0 down and $150 a month, 12 month minimum contract. Month to month after that.

In the beginning I just cold called from google and yelp. Then after about 30-40 clients the referrals started to come in and my website was ranking well locally. Now I get all my work from my website and referrals.

I started out by teaching myself web development in my car while I did Uber. In between rides I was coding and watching tutorials and doing online self paced bootcamps. After about a year and a half of that I got good enough at it to start freelancing. And here I am 5 years later with a full time front end developer job and I run my agency that makes 6 figures a year working it part time. The subscription account for about half my income. It’s passive and recurring. I do less than 10 hours of edits a year. Pretty chill.

Here’s an example of an $8k site

https://madscientistbbq.com

An example of a $6k site

https://striveptwellness.com

And a $3500 site

https://realdealpainting.net

[–] masterflex11@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (8 children)

No offence, but those sites don't seem any better than what you can do through Shopify, PrestaShop of Wordpress. I really don't know how people are willing to pay $8k for something you can quite easily achieve by even hiring help from websites like Fiverr.

This is an example of a $350 Shopify theme. Customizing the template is fairly simple to your needs and the administrative panel makes is very easy for someone not technical to set up stock and manage orders.

Not to sound negative and I applaud you for finding business, but what makes your business attractive compared to all the options out there?

[–] WhizzlePizzle@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (6 children)

quite easily achieve by even hiring help from websites like Fiverr.

Most business owners know fuckall about fiverr and websites.

You NEVER sell on price. If a person is that price conscious, they are not a viable prospect and you move on.

There are oodles of companies paying that much.

This is an example of a $350 Shopify theme.

That website comes up a LOT LOT LOT slower than /u/Citrous_Oyster's website.

what makes your business attractive compared to all the options out there?

Because there are other intangibles that people want that have nothing to do with price at all.

Most people don't purchase a business product or service until there are at least 7 communications with them. That's standard. It takes a lot of work to earn someone's trust. The way /u/Citrous_Oyster builds trust is his complete and total domination of the thing he excels at, which is static websites that come up in less than a second. His website that has a lot of valuable content. And trust is just one part of intangibles that businesses want. Maybe they just want someone who lives in the same city because they want to make sure they can directly talk to the website designer. Maybe that's not important to you, but you are not them.

I talk to prospects a lot. If we have a series of long conversations, and he or she is serious, at some point in the conversation, I'll send them a thank you card with a Starbucks card worth $10, and the note states that whether they use my services or not, I appreciate all their time they've spent. I can't begin to tell you how many sales that has closed. Why? Because it shows I care for them as a person. I send out birthday cards, anniversary cards, congratulations cards if I have that information. It shows I care, and I actually do. Sure, I want their business, but if I don't get it, that's fine, not getting business is part of the sales funnel. Not everyone is going to buy from you. But people VALUE when I send out personal touches, they WANT to be liked, and to be valued as people. Who doesn't?

Never compete on price, never.

[–] Rational_Philosophy@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You NEVER sell on price. If a person is that price conscious, they are not a viable prospect and you move on.

Good luck with this attitude. I love how the "secret" is to act entitled to your price, as if that's everyone else's problem instead of the market telling you you're over-priced or your product isn't that valuable, etc.

Guy above you is right; it looks like a basic website. The only person that's going to pay out the ass is the person that can be convinced they need to/have no clue they're getting taken for a ride by someone convinced their own product is worth that price, etc.

[–] WhizzlePizzle@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

I'm not saying to try to sell a website for $20 million.

However, I've actually sold websites for $3K+. This is not theory.

If you want to create websites like they do in Pakistan and want to charge $50, because that's what Pakistanis can do, hey, knock yourself out. You can make up for the low price by selling in volume.

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