If you went down for the $2k package you're up to 48% profit. After that you can tack on your $0.25/page and it's all gravy.Īnd, of course, this would be an easy thing to A/B test.Įdit: By the way, if you were willing to buy $500 in InterFax credits up-front (instead of $10 for their smallest package) you could do 10 pages/$0.99 with at least 33% profit. Disregarding marginal costs, that's 50% profit per transaction (assuming you eat the cost of a cover sheet)-at least! 125% profit for three-page faxes. Off the top of my head, though, I'd charge $0.99 for the first five pages. You'd want to do some market research to figure what are the most common page counts. I've never had to fax more than ten pages, so if I went to this site with my 3-6 pages I'd scoff-"Five bucks for three pages? Pffff." But that's me-maybe lots of people need to send 10-15 pages. Personally I think that $0.99-1.99 is the sweet spot, and you should tweak your cost and page counts to match that. I worked on a project very similar to this (and of course the others linked in this thread) for awhile (because I had a need for just such a service), so: 1) Kudos to you, the developer for actually shipping, which I did not do, and 2) I agree with others that you're pricing himself out of the market. So to send 15 pages through InterFax will cost a developer at most $1.65: For some more perspective: InterFax's smallest-and highest cost-per-page package-is $0.11/page.
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