How Much Should I Charge? A Simple Pricing Guide for Beginners

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Pricing your services is one of the most stressful parts of starting a business. If you charge too little, you feel underpaid. If you charge too much, you might feel insecure or scare off clients. Don’t worry — this post will help you find a number that feels fair and confident.


🧩 1. Know Your Costs

Before setting any price, write down:

  • How much time does this service take?
  • What tools or subscriptions do I pay for?
  • How many clients can I realistically serve per month?

Even a rough estimate gives you a base cost so you never price below your expenses.


🎯 2. Add Value, Not Just Time

Clients don’t pay you just for your time — they pay for the problem you solve.
Ask:

  • What is this result worth to my client?
  • How much time or stress am I saving them?

This mindset helps you charge not just based on hours, but impact.


💡 3. Use Bazie’s Rule of 3

Try this simple framework:

Type What it means
🟠 Minimum Price The lowest number you can survive on
🟢 Comfortable Price Feels fair and reflects your value
🔵 Confident Price A stretch number you’d charge if you fully owned your worth

Your real price should sit somewhere between Comfortable and Confident.


🛑 4. Don’t Undersell Just to “Get Clients”

It’s tempting to offer low rates when starting — but cheap clients often:

  • Expect more
  • Value you less
  • Burn you out faster

Charge with respect for your time and energy. The right clients will say yes.


🧸 Bazie’s Tip

“You’re not just offering a service — you’re delivering results. That’s worth something. Price like it.”

 

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