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Juicy tips and tricks from our world of pressing words.

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Why hourly rates suck and are unnecessary

hourly rates are a trapWhenever I attend a business conference, the chatter among the delegates usually ends being about hourly rates. I always end up in some robust debate about why hourly rates suck and why they are unnecessary.

Here’s the take-away version.

Hourly rates suck because they force you to trade time for money. That’s bad for you and your clients. It’s bad for you because it doesn’t allow you to scale your business. There are only so many hours in the week that you can charge your client so your earning capacity is capped.

It’s also bad for your client because the longer it takes you to deliver the job, the more expensive it will be. I’ll let that sink in for a bit.

This lightbulb went off for me a few years ago when I put in a proposal to a client with a project outline, deliverables, fee schedule and timeframe. The client approved the proposal but wanted to negotiate on the timeframe. 4 weeks was too long, they needed the site live in three weeks. Based on the hourly rate model, to deliver the job in three weeks meant that it should have been cheaper, given that I didn’t have as many hours to deliver it as I had quoted.

It was at this point that I realised the client was not paying for my time but for my medicine to fix their headache. My client had key stakeholders he was answerable to and a budget to work with. The budget was okay, the timeframe wasn’t. This was the last time I used my hourly rate to calculate a job.

How do you get around the hourly rate?

An hourly rate is the simplest metric that two parties can use when they don’t agree on the value being transferred in a transaction.

If you can illuminate the value to your client from the moment your paths cross, your hourly rate becomes irrelevant. I haven’t had anybody ask me for my hourly rate in the last three years.

How do you illuminate the value you bring to the project? Ask better quality questions at the front end of the project.

Ask your client why they are doing what they are doing. Ask why a lot. Don’t accept their first answer. Ask why again.

Ask them what success looks like in their eyes.

Ask them what superpower they think you bring to the table.

Ask them why they are not ourtsourcing the project on Elance or Odesk? (Yes, I actually ask my clients that question).

Ask them what budget they have allocated for the project.

Asking these questions will elevate you above the “average web developer”. And that allows you to charge project fees that are above average.

The more you can illuminate the value you bring to the project before you submit your proposal, the easier it is to charge a fair and reasonable price for that value.

i’d love to hear your feedback on this so leave me a comment below. Oh and you might enjoy this article from Shane Pearlman of Modern Tribe too.

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Menus and Widgets Videos

You asked for them, so we made them.

We just added new videos to the Video User Manuals plugin to cover how to use the WordPress menus feature and how to use widgets!

By default, these videos are turned off, so to activate them, you’ll need to login and turn them on for those clients that need them.

There is no extra cost for these videos so existing subscribers do not need to do anything except turn them on. You don’t even need to update the plugin.

These videos are only available in English for now but will be available in all the foreign languages for WordPress 3.5 which is due out in a few weeks.

If you have any feedback on the new videos, please leave us a comment below.

If you’ve got any ideas for future versions of the plugin, leave your feedback on our feature request page.

We’re doing our best to make this plugin the best we can for you and we have some super cool features coming soon .

Stay tuned.

Oh, and if you’re not already a subscriber to the plugin, you might want get a piece of the action now.

Buy your copy here.

Enjoy!

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An Interview with Justin Cutroni, Analytics Advocate at Google

Justin Cutroni is Analytics Advocate at Google. That’s right, he works for the big “G”. He’s also a published author ([amazon_link id=”1449319041″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Google Analytics[/amazon_link]) has designed components that are still used on Satellites orbiting the earth and is an all-round nice guy as I found out during this interview.

In this video, Justin Cutroni spends 45 minutes chatting about Google Analytics, how to use it as a small business owner and how web developers can use it to differentiate themselves from their competition.

You can also win a copy of his excellent book “Google Analytics”. Watch the video for full details.

Here are the resources I mention in the video.

Google Analytics

Google Tag Manager

Justin’s books:

[amazon_link id=”1449319041″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Google Analytics[/amazon_link]

[amazon_link id=”0470578319″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Performance Marketing Analytics[/amazon_link]

 

To win a copy of Justin’s awesome Google Analytics book, suggest a feature you’d like to see in Google Analytics below and Justin will swing by in a couple of weeks and judge the best contribution.

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Three things your clients expect you to know

If you’re just building websites for your clients, you’re standing on a very shaky foundation that could crack and give way any minute. Building websites is simply not enough. It’s a very competitive business and due to the accessibility of information, websites have become a commodity business.

Now that doesn’t mean you should start competing on price. On the contrary. You should be raising your fees. How?

By adding more value than anybody else can.

Here are three things your client expects you to know and three ways you can add tons of value to your next client project. Continue reading