How to Raise Your Agency Prices From $2,500 to $45,000/Month (Without Changing Deliverables) With...
Автор: Agency Mastery
Загружено: 2026-03-04
Просмотров: 10
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Most agency owners don't fail because they're bad at delivery.
They fail because they underprice, overcomplicate, and build businesses that trap them instead of freeing them.
Today's featured guest unpacks the type of life he envisioned when he set out to start an agency, it took to scale from charging $2,500 a month to closing $45,000/month retainers, surviving a market collapse, and making the counterintuitive decision to split one agency into two.
Eli Rubel is the founder of Matter Made (https://mattermade.us/) , a B2B SaaS marketing agency, and No Boring Design (https://www.noboringdesign.com/) , a premium design studio serving high-growth tech companies. He entered the agency world in 2019 after burning out on the venture-backed SaaS model, despite a previous exit.
What drew him to agencies wasn't prestige or scale; it was a desire to take control over his time, lifestyle, income, and location. Agencies, when built correctly, offered the fastest path to freedom without sacrificing ambition.
Over the next few years, Eli scaled MatterMade aggressively, navigated a brutal tech downturn, and rebuilt his business with sharper positioning, stronger pricing, and clearer operational boundaries.
In this episode, we discussed:
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Why hiking prices was the right choice early one
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How and why he decided to create his second agency
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The reason that shared services failed fast
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Sponsors and Resources
E2M Solutions: Today's episode of the Smart Agency Masterclass is sponsored by E2M Solutions, a web design, and development agency that has provided white-label services for the past 10 years to agencies all over the world. Check out e2msolutions.com/smartagency (http://e2msolutions.com/smartagency) and get 10% off for the first three months of service.
Toggl: Agencies could be losing 15–30% of their profit every year without seeing it. The usual suspects are time tracking, messy manual timesheets, scope creep, untracked revisions, and all those "quick" client requests that never get billed. That's why Toggl created the Agency Profit Heist, a fast, interactive way to uncover exactly where your margins are leaking. Start your investigation now at toggl.com/smartagency (https://heist.toggl.com/?utm_campaign...) and use the code SMARTAGENCY10 at checkout for a 10% off annual plans.
Why Agencies Beat Venture-Backed SaaS (If You Want Freedom)
After years in venture-backed SaaS, chasing growth at all costs, Eli was done with a model he realized was grinding him down. The pressure, the lack of control, and the delayed payoff didn't align with what he actually wanted: family, flexibility, and financial independence.
Agencies offered speed to cash and autonomy, which SaaS didn't. Instead of swinging for a hypothetical future exit, Eli chose a business model that paid well now and let him design his life intentionally.
It was a shift he made with eyes wide open and clear expectations. The "best" business model depends on what you want your life to look like. For Eli, agencies weren't a step down. They were a strategic upgrade.
Hiking His Prices Relying on Capacity and Confidence
Eli's agency launched at $2,500 a month, not because that was the "right" price, but because he backed into a simple income goal. Sixteen clients at $2,500 got him to $40,000 a month. On paper, it worked.
In reality, it broke fast.
As soon as clients started saying "yes" too quickly, Eli knew something was off. The work was heavy, margins were thin, and building a team at that price point wasn't sustainable. Instead of obsessing over competitive pricing, he leaned into price sensitivity testing (https://flatworm-caterpillar-3mha.squ...) .
Every time the team hit capacity, prices went up. If prospects said no, it didn't matter, they couldn't take on more work anyway. If prospects said yes, it justified hiring and scaling.
Over three years, pricing climbed from $2,500 to $45,000 per month.
What he learned was that underpricing doesn't just hurt margins. It traps you in constant hiring, delivery stress, and low-leverage work. Raising prices isn't greedy, it's operational discipline.
What Actually Changes When You Raise Prices
Eli didn't wake up one day and charge $45,000 for the same work he was doing at $2,500.
Early on, the offering was vague (https://flatworm-cater...
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