How to Price and Package Your Chatbot Service
What You Will Learn
In this tutorial, you will learn how to set your rates, create clear packages, and write proposals that win clients.
Before you start: Know your target client and how much the platform costs. Have a rough idea of how many hours a typical project takes.
Before You Start
You need a working chatbot you can demonstrate to a potential client, even if it is just a demo.
You should also have decided which monetization model you are going with (from the previous tutorial). This tutorial focuses on the done-for-you service model, but the principles apply to others.
Why Pricing Is Hard
Pricing too low attracts bad clients and burns you out. Pricing too high scares people away before they see your value. The goal is to find the middle: enough to be profitable, low enough to be believable.
Step 1: Calculate Your Costs
Before you set a price, know what it costs you to deliver:
- Platform subscription (monthly)
- Your time (hours per project)
- Any tools or add-ons
Example:
Platform: $50 per month Your time: 10 hours per project at $50 per hour = $500 Total cost to you: $550
You need to charge more than $550 to make a profit.
Step 2: Research the Market
Look at what others charge. Search for "chatbot development" or "AI chatbot for business" on Upwork, Fiverr, or agency websites. Note the range.
Typical ranges:
- Basic FAQ bot: $300 to $1,500 setup
- Custom bot with integrations: $1,500 to $5,000
- Monthly retainer: $100 to $500
Your location and niche affect this. Local businesses may pay less than tech startups. E-commerce may pay more than simple service businesses.
Step 3: Create Packages
Instead of "I build chatbots," offer clear packages:
Starter: FAQ chatbot, 1 website, 5 pages of content. $500 setup + $150 per month.
Growth: FAQ + lead capture + 1 integration (e.g. email). $1,200 setup + $250 per month.
Pro: Custom flows, multiple integrations, analytics. $2,500 setup + $400 per month.
Packages make it easier for clients to choose. They also set expectations.
Step 4: Write a Simple Proposal
When a client asks for a quote, send a short proposal:
- What you will deliver
- What is included
- Timeline
- Price
- Next step
Example:
"I will build a customer support chatbot for your website. It will answer your top 10 FAQs, capture leads, and use your branding. I will train it on your content and deploy it within 2 weeks. Price: $600 setup + $200 per month for hosting and updates. Reply with "Yes" to get started."
Step 5: Handle Objections
If they say "That is too expensive."
- Ask what budget they have
- Offer a smaller package
- Explain what they get (24/7 support, lead capture, time saved)
If they say "I need to think about it."
- Offer a deadline: "This price is valid for 7 days."
- Ask what would help them decide
- Follow up once after a few days
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Do not compete on price alone. Compete on quality, speed, and service. Cheap clients are often the most demanding.
- Do not give a vague quote. "I will build a bot" is unclear. Specify what is included and what is not.
- Do not forget to include revisions. State how many rounds of feedback are included.
- Do not work without a contract or written agreement. A simple email confirming scope and price is better than nothing.
Next Step
In the next tutorial, you will learn how to find and win your first chatbot clients. You will identify ideal customers, create outreach messages, and get your first conversations.
After that, you will explore the best AI tools for cold email personalization. Use one to write and send personalized outreach to potential clients.
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