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by RobKanda
1914 days ago
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Hi, thanks for taking the time to look over the site and thanks for the feedback! Our base price for our subscription might seem cheap, but for tradespeople, whose margins might already be tight, its seen as a fair price for the quoting and invoicing features. The 9% or 11% subsidy we charge is on the quote total when the tradesperson offers 0% finance - if a customer took out a 0% loan for £1000, we would charge the tradesperson a £90 (or £110) subsidy for the finance package. If you’d like to see the demo video, here’s the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVHBFHTNS90&ab_channel=Kanda For card processing, we actually support both debit and credit cards, though typically we process debit cards and have a subsidy charge for credit card processing, due to higher processing fees from the banks. We do think Kanda is a big win for the small guy - we put the power in their hands to compete with the big companies in the sector, offering finance products they couldn’t otherwise offer and winning more work for it |
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I’m not used to the term “subsidy” used in this manner (is this a common British English usage for “fee”? In the video you use the term “fee”), but if you’re basically charging ~10% of the invoice then that’s a very different story.
In that universe, the monthly charge is basically your hurdle for support. Free / cheaper would give you more volume, but you probably don’t currently want folks who aren’t willing to pay even a few pounds a month for support. I’d still say there isn’t enough spread between those plans though.
Like the downstream comment, I feel like I’d want the fees more clearly spelled out on the pricing page. “Offer installment plans to your customers (11% fee)” or something. It would make it more clear that “oh, I’ll be using that, I should take the other plan for the 2% drop; even 1000 pounds of work a month pays for itself”.
The video makes it clear that in your UI the fees are more clear (though I might add a paragraph break when describing that the financing option is “cost to you: 11%” and the personal loan “cost to you: 0%” but then say “customers prefer the 0% interest, even with higher quotes” or something). So I think to improve your customer acquisition, you just need a bit more clarity in the pricing panel text.
P.S. thanks for the video! I think you had an editing problem though. The “let’s see the customer view” happens both at the start and again after we see the vendor-side view. (Unless that’s intentional)