|
|
|
|
|
by cosmie
1911 days ago
|
|
I've executed my own email programs for small projects before, and had the same reaction when I started working at an agency and saw how much we charged for that type of work. Interestingly enough, it's actually not as padded as it seems. While the update itself may only take an hour or so of time, there's a few hours of communication/procedural overhead baked into these things: - Receive a project brief
- Align with client on the contents of the brief
- Provide estimate and get sign off (potentially before the brief, if this is repeat work for an existing client)
- Do actual work
- Client review of work
- Revisions. Usually incredibly minor nitpicking, but virtually always requested.
- Final client review and acceptance Whether the work takes 30 minutes or 30 hours, that procedural overhead is standard in BigCo marketing departments, and creates a price floor of about $500 since even the tiniest requests end up taking several hours of total effort (communication/procedural stuff + actual work). If you're engaging an agency instead of a freelancer, that floor jumps to about $1,000 as the entire process gets facilitated by an account manager + PM, so you have to add in a couple hours of their time as well for the procedural/communication overhead. --- Not to say that's a particularly efficient process, or that it should be that way. But figured I'd share that perspective, since I initially reacted the same way you did when I saw those estimates for stuff that should have taken a trivially small amount of time to accomplish. |
|