Website Cost
How Much Should a Website cost?
My clients occasionally ask how much they should pay for various aspects of developing a Website
or some of the associated other marketing tools that are usually developed. Unfortunately, the
answer I give is one of the two answers that consultants give--"That depends." (The other answer
they give is "You'll need to give me more money.") The current November 2011 issue of Website
magazine presents the results of a survey of their readership, so now at last I can give a better answer
to the question.
Outsourcing
A freelance Web designer working overseas
might charge as little as $20 an hour, while a freelance US designer will typically charge $50 per hour.
To engage a US freelance designer, one way to locate someone is to do a Google search for a Web designer in
your area, then study a few designers' portfolios. If you do plan to use overseas outsourcing, be sure to
allow for careful review of what's produced so that you can identify and rectify anything due to cultural
differences.
A small firm is likely to be willing to develop your site for a fixed price, and you'll have the
benefit of inputs from more than one person, at what is usually a higher total price. A larger,
more estalblished firm is also likely to work on a fixed price, but a higher fixed price than the smaller
firm.
Costs
Here is what the Website Magazine poll produced:
Typical Website Costs
| Logo |
Students/Offshore $100-$250+
Freelance/Professional $250-$1,000
|
| Brochure Website |
Students/Offshore $500-$1,000+
Freelance/Professional $1,500-$5,000+
|
| E-Commerce Website |
Outsourced Designers $1,000-$5,000+
Design Firms $2,000-$10,000+
|
|
Custom Database
or
Interactive Website
|
Outsourced Designers $1,500-$15,000
Design Firms: $2,500-$25,000
|
The Bottom Line
These benchmarks can give you some idea of what you might pay. Be very specific about what
you ask for and make sure you understand how many reviews are expected before you enter into a fixed
price arrangement.
|