Commercial clarityPricing approach

Price follows scope, risk and responsibility.

Understand the variables behind a proposal without pretending that every website or workflow is the same product.

What affects cost

Complexity lives in decisions and connections.

  • 01Number and complexity of user journeys
  • 02Content strategy, writing and localization
  • 03Data, rules and exception handling
  • 04Third-party integrations and their limitations
  • 05Accounts, permissions and sensitive information
  • 06Testing, migration, training and launch support
Starting prices

A proposal begins with a defined scope.

TrexNext does not reduce different systems to one generic figure. A proposal states third-party fees, exclusions, assumptions and payment stages separately so the commercial boundary stays clear.

Working models

Use the commercial shape that matches uncertainty.

01

Fixed project

For a defined outcome, boundary, milestones and change process.

02

Discovery sprint

For resolving workflow, scope or integration uncertainty before build.

03

Ongoing care

For named reliability, maintenance and improvement responsibilities.

Shown separately

Know what the proposal includes and what it depends on.

  • 01Hosting, domains and third-party subscriptions
  • 02Paid media, stock assets or specialist production
  • 03Tax, legal, accounting or compliance advice
  • 04Work outside the agreed scope
FAQ

Questions before you begin.

01Why not show one price for every website?

Because content, journeys, integrations, migration and operational responsibility materially change the work.

02Can the project be phased?

Yes, when each phase delivers a coherent result and does not create hidden rework.

03Are third-party fees included?

They are identified separately so ownership, renewal and price changes remain clear.

Next step

Turn the friction into a clear plan.

Tell us what should become easier for customers and the team.