You’ve got your certification in one hand, your color wheel in the other, and you’re ready to take the professional world by storm! People are interested in your design services and you can’t wait to put your skills to use. There’s only one problem: you haven’t priced your services!
Many new professionals feel nervous about pricing their services and building service packages. It’s a fine balance between charging enough to make a living and charging too much that clients take their business elsewhere. Your home design packages should offer a full range of services without including ‘extras’ that your clients don’t need.
Putting time and effort into building great design packages and pricing them well is one of the most important steps to start your career off on the right foot! Check out these key steps for doing just that!
Step 1: Define your services
Dissect your talents and figure out what you actually have to offer your clients. Are you a professional organizer who specializes in eco-friendly design? Do you fare best when selecting furniture and decor pieces to brighten up a home? What extra services—such as professional organizing or downsizing—have you been trained to do? Lay your skills on the table and analyze exactly what you have to offer your clients.Step 2: Create appealing combinations
Now that you know what you’re capable of, assess how you should market each service. Choose combinations of services that go well together and build packages based on the combinations that interest your target clients most. For example, as a professional organizer you can have different packages such as workspace/desk organization, a more advanced option that involves a service such as expanding storage solutions, and a third “full-service” option that involves organizing an entire room. Having smaller bundle services that may rest outside of the larger scale services can be an additional way to tap into other areas of your expertise. For professional organizers, consider having a decluttering/downsizing package designed specifically for those who are moving homes. As for home stagers, why not have a package for reworking clients’ old furniture into new designs and another for going shopping with them? Be sure to include a list of à-la-carte service, too. For example, Feng Shui design clients may just want a consultation on rearranging furniture they already have. Or, if you’re an interior decorator, clients may just want to revamp their window treatments while keeping everything else intact. Making sure you’re not only offering rigid service packages will draw in clientele for other services and they may eventually want or need your large-scale packages. Don’t close any doors for yourself! You should also consider the size of the houses and the surrounding lot when creating your packages. Larger homes would typically require more time, more hands, and more work than smaller homes. Here’s where it gets fun: You’ll want to name your packages in a way that grabs clients’ attention while still being informative. Take the three professional organizing packages we mentioned above, for example. You could call them:- Desktop Redesign package
- Closet Clean-up package
- The Makeover Magic package
Step 3: Research your local industry
You have to do your homework! Building packages is one thing, but actually putting a price to them is another. Your prices should be competitive, meaning that they’re similar to the “going rate” or the standard price in your area. Pricing competitively benefits both you and the rest of your local community.- By pricing too low, you could drag the going rate in your area down by forcing other design professionals to lower their prices to compete with yours. This causes everyone to make less money. You might also risk being perceived as less experienced or unable to do your job if you’re not charging what you’re worth.
- By pricing too high, you could drive the going rate up. This sounds like a positive thing at first, but people won’t really make more money if local services become too expensive and clients lose interest in the industry.