water_icia
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- Mar 26, 2010
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- 40
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That's your choice. I am about to increase my price from £60 to £65 per hour, I have no problem with this. As I have built my business, the overheads have increased too. It takes me approximately (depends on the split between my locations) 20 sessions per month just to break even, as a self-employed person I don't earn holiday pay, sick pay etc, this is also worked into my pricing.
As you said, the work is related to helping people in life. So, how do you put a price on it?
At my current rates, a smoker spending £2000 per year on cigarettes quits with me for £180.
A fairly wealthy couple I treated for cocaine use were spending £65,000 per year between them. They did joint sessions at £90 per hour, after three sessions they stopped completely £270 to save their health and £65,000 per year.
Countless clients I have treated for depression/anxiety have lived with these problems for many years and then changed the rest of their life for just £180-£360.
A recent life coaching client has gone from earning £100,000pa to £175,000pa and works less hours, has a better quality of home life, better health, has quit smoking, reduced his drinking, lowered his stress levels - total cost £600, another bargain! At the other end of the spectrum, my first Borderline Personality Disorder client was on benefits when I treated her. She also travelled from Stafford to Manchester for her sessions so I treated her in double sessions to make better use of her time and money. At the rates I was charging back then, she spent £600 and, after 20 years of living with BPD (despite every therapy available on the NHS), was finally freed from this debilitating problem.
The list goes on and on........... people who choose their therapist based on price don't interest me, I want clients who want to improve their lives, not try something once and see if it works (the usual profile of clients who choose based on price).
My dentist charges me £25 for a 6 minute check up, that's £250 per hour. My solicitor charges me around the same and my accountant isn't much cheaper. Welcome to the real world.
When I needed to see a dermatologist, my Gp told me the waiting list for NHS was 12 months. I saw one privately at £90 per hour. Don't hate the prices, hate the fact the NHS doesn't offer these therapies so readily, the NHS is the only way to make these therapies available to all. No matter how cheap you go, there will always be some who can't afford it (even though many of these will waste more than £60 per fortnight on cigs, alcohol, drugs, junk food and any number of other things they would cut out to pay for therapy if they placed enough importance on it).
As you said, the work is related to helping people in life. So, how do you put a price on it?
At my current rates, a smoker spending £2000 per year on cigarettes quits with me for £180.
A fairly wealthy couple I treated for cocaine use were spending £65,000 per year between them. They did joint sessions at £90 per hour, after three sessions they stopped completely £270 to save their health and £65,000 per year.
Countless clients I have treated for depression/anxiety have lived with these problems for many years and then changed the rest of their life for just £180-£360.
A recent life coaching client has gone from earning £100,000pa to £175,000pa and works less hours, has a better quality of home life, better health, has quit smoking, reduced his drinking, lowered his stress levels - total cost £600, another bargain! At the other end of the spectrum, my first Borderline Personality Disorder client was on benefits when I treated her. She also travelled from Stafford to Manchester for her sessions so I treated her in double sessions to make better use of her time and money. At the rates I was charging back then, she spent £600 and, after 20 years of living with BPD (despite every therapy available on the NHS), was finally freed from this debilitating problem.
The list goes on and on........... people who choose their therapist based on price don't interest me, I want clients who want to improve their lives, not try something once and see if it works (the usual profile of clients who choose based on price).
My dentist charges me £25 for a 6 minute check up, that's £250 per hour. My solicitor charges me around the same and my accountant isn't much cheaper. Welcome to the real world.
When I needed to see a dermatologist, my Gp told me the waiting list for NHS was 12 months. I saw one privately at £90 per hour. Don't hate the prices, hate the fact the NHS doesn't offer these therapies so readily, the NHS is the only way to make these therapies available to all. No matter how cheap you go, there will always be some who can't afford it (even though many of these will waste more than £60 per fortnight on cigs, alcohol, drugs, junk food and any number of other things they would cut out to pay for therapy if they placed enough importance on it).