ArticlesReader.com

 

ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Family

It's About More Than Money: are you charging what you're

Author : Angela Booth

*Article Use Guidelines*

Use in opt-in publications, or on Web sites, but please include the resource box. If you could send a copy to me at email address: mailto:ab@digital-e.biz , I appreciate it. Many thanks. **

Summary: Price takers and price makers. Are you charging what you're worth, or does pricing your small business services and products make you nervous?

Total words: 700

Category: Small Business

It's About More Than Money: are you charging what you're worth?

Copyright (c) 2002 by Angela Booth

Last April I had a surreal experience with a popular women's magazine I used to write for.

An editorial assistant emailed me: "Sorry about not getting back to you sooner about article X. We'd like to publish it. What are your rates?"

My eyes lit up. "Money. You beauty," I thought. I may have chortled aloud. Possibly I danced a jig around my crowded office.

Unseemly glee, you think. You're right. I remembered that the check hadn't cleared the bank and focused on the task at hand. Negotiation.

I hit the Reply button.

Then my fingertips stilled on the keyboard. Eh? What did she mean, what are my rates? They know what my rates are. My rates are exactly the same as they've been since 1995. Or 1992. They're what this publishing conglomerate pays. They're standard across all the magazines they own. They're going up, the editors promise. Next month. Next year. When hell freezes over.

What the heck. I typed happily, already deciding what I could buy with the money. Printer cartridges. Dog worming tablets. Maybe a new pair of jeans, even. "Your usual rates are fine. You paid me $X for the 800 word Christmas article."

So a week later the assistant emails me to say they're not publishing the piece. They can't afford my rates.

Well praise the lord and pass the ammunition. The rates aren't going up. They're going down.

That day I decided that I was out of the magazine writing business.

In the magazine writing business, I was a price taker. I decided to saddle up for the happy hunting ground of copywriting, where I was a price maker.

=> Charging what you're worth

How much are you worth? You can't stay in business if you don't know. (If you're unsure how to set your basic prices, read Elena Fawkner's piece on the Web site, the URL's below in Additional Resource.)

However, there's more to pricing than setting your basic prices. If you have years of experience, offer fast turnaround, and are prepared to handle jobs on weekends, and overnight, you can charge more.

What if you up your rates, and your clients won't pay your increased prices? I promise you, if you up the price to what you're honestly worth (and you know this, you must, if you've been at your trade for any time at all) and you lose clients, you would have lost them anyway.

Who knows why clients bail? Paradoxically, I've lost clients when I lowered my fees, never when I upped them. Go figure. Maybe they thought my services were worth less because I charged less. The reason I lowered my fees was always because I liked that particular client, and wanted to do them a good turn. Which proves the adage that no good deed goes unpunished.

Nowadays I'm tempted to up my rates if I like working for a particular client.

==> Value adding--- your secret weapon, the proposal

A diamond is worth more than a lump of coal: you can charge more if you deliver more.

Proposals are my favorite value-adding tool. If you can see an area where the client needs some input, why not create a proposal?

Proposals cost little: maybe a couple of hours of research, and an hour to write. They're a supreme goodwill gesture. They show the client that you've been thinking about his business.

The worst that can happen is that the client says no.

If you're unsure about how to write a proposal, type "writing a proposal" into any search engine for loads of resources.

So, are you a price taker, or a price maker? If you're unhappy with what you're being paid, it will show in your work. For that reason, you must work out a pricing strategy you're happy with. And stick with it.

==> Additional Resource

If you're a newly independent creative, or want to brush up on your pricing skills, check out :

http://www.digital-e.biz/articles.html" target="_blank">http://www.digital-e.biz/articles.html

This is Elena Fawkner's excellent piece called: "Pricing Yourself to Get and Stay In Business".

***Resource box: if using, please include***

When your words sound good, you sound good. Author and copywriter Angela Booth crafts words for your business --- words to sell, educate or persuade. Mailto:ab@digital-e.biz

Web: http://www.digital-e.biz/" target="_blank">http://www.digital-e.biz/

**END**

Author and journalist Angela Booth writes copy for businesses large and small.



Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Let your children build their own online holiday wishlists
  2. Get To Know Your Legal Rights
  3. Magazines for Kids - A New Generation
  4. MOSQUITOES ARE A HAZARD TO YOUR PET'S HEALTH TOO
  5. What You Can Learn About Life From Your Child
  6. Empty Nest Syndrome
  7. Do You Have A Vision?
  8. Parenting
  9. "DO YOU LIKE HER?"
  10. Reflections on the Peace Prayer of Saint Francis of Assisi
  11. Raising Creative Grandchildren
  12. Paying for your Child's College Education
  13. Decorating a Child's Room - 8 Simple Strategies to Make You Both Happy!
  14. Spare Your Kids To 7 Most Distressful Divorce Parenting Situations
  15. Beyond the Words, a Child's Voice
  16. Overextended Infants
  17. Glowing Goblins
  18. The Best Way to Protect Your Children in the Car
  19. Forbidden - An Author Interview
  20. What I learned on family vacation
  21. How to Care for Your Photographs
  22. ANTIQUE MAPS & PRINTS - UNIQUE HOLIDAY GIFTS WITH A PERSONAL TOUCH
  23. Book Review of "Where's Stretch?"
  24. An Overlooked Plan for Bush, Kerry, Democrats, Republicans, and Healthcare Costs
  25. $ 12 and 90 minutes to change your life !
More related feeds
It's the Economy, Stupid - GoldSeek.com
Wow, all of a sudden, you're living for free, and getting paid too! You just created, out of thin air, the equivalent of a $1200000 muni bond portfolio. Maybe more, if you consider tax benefits (rental properties can charge depreciation ...

Girl Meets Business | Three work essentials: Rock, Paper, Scissors
Rockstars may not be all about the money, but they understand it’s important. Are there more important things than money? Most definitely. But, Rockstars know it has its place. “Money, if it does not bring you happiness, will at least ...

So you’re thinking Syria, eh? « Souvenirs and Scars
But I haven’t had it changed to the new pricing yet!” and then expectantly wait for you to pay more. Don’t. And if he says its working and five minuets in it isn’t ask him what he’s going to charge. If it doesn’t sound right get off and ...

Internet Marketing's Words That Sound too Good to be True : SEO ...
you're leaving money on the table = It's my money (on your table), and I need it now. (a shout out to J.G. Wentworth!) cutting edge system = outdated advice (with a high affiliate payout); buy today or miss out = if you buy you are ...

Big Hollywood » Blog Archive » Coffee Is For Conservatives
The odds are so great that you will never see your “investment” again, that the State of New York REQUIRES investors to sign a legal document certifying that they understand they will probably never see their money again. It’s more ...

Ask your pharmacy for a price match - Smart Spending Blog - MSN Money
I agree with looking at other pharmacies for cheaper meds, but beware if you start using more than pharmacy. When you use multiple pharmacies they may not know all of your current medications and will be unable to check for serious drug ...

Greenspeak: No, You're not the same 1up.
You all are worth far more than either Ziff or UGO could ever hope to understand. January 7, 2009 8:25 AM · Mike said... Jeff, I was so sad when you left. Then I was sad again when Shawn left, and now its just, poof; totally gone. ...

Elliot Jay Stocks » Let’s talk money
The nice thing about this, of course, is that if you’re not interested in being super-rich but can charge a decent daily rate, you could happily choose to work less (e.g: if you’re happy earning £2500 a month but charge £500 a day, ...

bestcbstore.blogr.com - stories - 2009-01-06-Make-Money-Taking-Surveys
Nothing is more important to the team here at Survey Broker than the satisfaction of our customers. Because of this, we outright refuse to consider your payment final until you're 100% satisfied with your new working experience. ...

Stockerblog - The Stock Market Blog: Guest Article by Natalie Pace ...
... off -- when in reality they drowned their clients' nest eggs in 2008 -- it's your job to take charge and design a better dream life. As TD AMERITRADE Chairman Joe Moglia says, "Nobody cares more about your money more than you do." ...