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Raised rates and sales dried up. When do you raise rates?


willstauff

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Posted

Anyone ever raise their rates and sales dried up? Was trying to figure out what happened. I was cruising then boom it all dried up as soon as I raised my rates. Another bonus quesiton…if you change out your profile video too many times and update it will it hurt your traffic?

Posted

This is what I did when I decided to raise my price a few years ago:

I contacted my regular buyers and gave them a heads up that I will be raising my price.
I also added that due to the work load I was getting and also because of the amount of details I put into my work, I strongly believe that it was about time I raised my price.
Surprisingly, most of my regulars understood ( only a handful got upset, one even called me “greedy”) and I went ahead and raised the price a few days later.
A few buyers messaged me saying that raising the price is a good idea, and that I have every right to do so. They also added that people will always understand the value of hard work and will be willing to pay. That really made me happy.

I guess the bottom line is, as long as you are good at what you do, there will always be people who are willing to pay for that.
It looks like you have great reviews, that itself should be enough to attract buyers.
I’m sure you will get new customers, and I’m also sure a good number of your past clients will contact you again.

Posted

Every time you update your gig (in fact, every time you just CLICK “edit”), your gig will be out of search results for anything up to 48 hours. Keep that in mind when deciding about making changes.

Also keep in mind that it may simply be a coincidence, there are highs and lows all the time in this business and so it might not be related at all.

Posted

I used to have 5 gigs which sold regularly. I was advised by a Fiverr wizard to increase my rates in December last year. Instantly I was cut down to just 2 gigs which sell regularly and after a recent bout of editing a couple of months ago, I’m down to 1. Other gigs do sell but not anywhere nearly as regularly as they used to.

It does seem to be the editing process itself as creating new gigs seems to work the other way round where instead of dropping sales and impressions, these steadily start to increase.

If I was you, I wouldn’t do anything else at all with your gig or gigs. See if sales recover and next time don’t amend your pricing. Instead, create a new gig with a new price structure and start diverting existing buyers to it.

Guest chelsea101
Posted

I’m experiencing the same thing but have decided to give it sometime

Guest uxreview
Posted

Anyone ever raise their rates and sales dried up? Was trying to figure out what happened. I was cruising then boom it all dried up as soon as I raised my rates. Another bonus quesiton…if you change out your profile video too many times and update it will it hurt your traffic?

Anyone ever raise their rates and sales dried up?

That’s normal, but you’ll see from your monthly revenue if you made the right call or not.

It depends on your target audience and the value it brings to them. Your most popular gig is celebrity voiceover and the price is $5. You need to ask yourself what is it worth to your clients. How are they using the voiceover clip? If they buy it to make a prank call or a greeting card, then most likely they’re not willing to pay $50 for it.

However, if you make a radio commercial for $50 and it helps your client make sales, then next time they are probably willing to pay even more.

If you’d like to increase your prices then maybe you should consider targeting high paying customers, but they want a service that has a high ROI.

Posted

I’m earning less than half what I earned two months ago due to editing my gigs and increasing the prices from $5 to $10 on some. I’m back where I was three years ago income wise.

It’s upsetting to reach an income goal just a few months ago, only to see it set back to my income level three years ago.

My number of completed orders is less than half what it had been. It’s like I am only working ten days a month, income-wise.

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

ordersdown.PNG.125e151e88d02251765124df5e539989.PNG

Posted

I’m earning less than half what I earned two months ago due to editing my gigs and increasing the prices from $5 to $10 on some. I’m back where I was three years ago income wise.

It’s upsetting to reach an income goal just a few months ago, only to see it set back to my income level three years ago.

My number of completed orders is less than half what it had been. It’s like I am only working ten days a month, income-wise.

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

ordersdown

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

I don’t know about this. We don’t need to go to the extremes and discourage others to make changes which might be beneficial for them. Fiverr always encourages sellers to keep their gigs updated and up to speed. I edited my gigs, raised my prices and changed things up here and there and it never hurt me. Though I have to say the beginning of October was a bit slow and odd. It might be just a bad month but I also don’t rely on Fiverr alone.

Hang in there!

Posted

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

I don’t know about this. We don’t need to go to the extremes and discourage others to make changes which might be beneficial for them. Fiverr always encourages sellers to keep their gigs updated and up to speed. I edited my gigs, raised my prices and changed things up here and there and it never hurt me. Though I have to say the beginning of October was a bit slow and odd. It might be just a bad month but I also don’t rely on Fiverr alone.

Hang in there!

I’m relating my experience. I wish I had never changed anything. I’m showing proof of the results.

I’ve never had a drop in sales like that!

Posted

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

I don’t know about this. We don’t need to go to the extremes and discourage others to make changes which might be beneficial for them. Fiverr always encourages sellers to keep their gigs updated and up to speed. I edited my gigs, raised my prices and changed things up here and there and it never hurt me. Though I have to say the beginning of October was a bit slow and odd. It might be just a bad month but I also don’t rely on Fiverr alone.

Hang in there!

I’ve been editing gigs waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much though. Bad habit welll no longer…

Posted

I’m relating my experience. I wish I had never changed anything. I’m showing proof of the results.

I’ve never had a drop in sales like that!

It might not be due to editing. Perhaps just a funky month overall. I know some of the veteran sellers have been complaining about sales as well.

Posted

It might not be due to editing. Perhaps just a funky month overall. I know some of the veteran sellers have been complaining about sales as well.

Things were always very steady as far as income and number of orders go. I could count on about the same thing every month with steady increases.

To go from having phenomenal months steadily to this… something is horribly wrong.

After the algorithm change, things again picked up, then I made the mistake of editing some gigs and that’s where I’m at now, back to the beginning.

I’ve almost been here five years now. I’ve never experienced a drop like this.

Posted

It might not be due to editing. Perhaps just a funky month overall. I know some of the veteran sellers have been complaining about sales as well.

The thing is, it might not be the editing but editing does seem to be a common factor associated with sales decreases. It’s only right to point this out.

Posted

It might not be due to editing. Perhaps just a funky month overall. I know some of the veteran sellers have been complaining about sales as well.

September was a really bad month for me and it was starting to catch up pretty well in October, but since 10th of October the orders just stopped coming. There are many other sellers in my situation. And with every change I do, I have no success, it feels like I destroy it even more. There are even some TRS on the front page that have now ~10ish orders from hundreds, while there are some newly created accounts (May-June 2017) that are receiving 20-30 reviews/day. I think that the new search algorithm was a real success for some and destroyed tens of business here. Hopefully it will recover.

Posted

September was a really bad month for me and it was starting to catch up pretty well in October, but since 10th of October the orders just stopped coming. There are many other sellers in my situation. And with every change I do, I have no success, it feels like I destroy it even more. There are even some TRS on the front page that have now ~10ish orders from hundreds, while there are some newly created accounts (May-June 2017) that are receiving 20-30 reviews/day. I think that the new search algorithm was a real success for some and destroyed tens of business here. Hopefully it will recover.

The best stance to take is that it won’t recover. Take your service and replicate it off Fiverr in a way where you have more control over the amount of traffic gets directed at your ‘gig.’ Fiverr and the algorithm can’t be challenged or realistically worked with.

Posted

I used to have 5 gigs which sold regularly. I was advised by a Fiverr wizard to increase my rates in December last year. Instantly I was cut down to just 2 gigs which sell regularly and after a recent bout of editing a couple of months ago, I’m down to 1. Other gigs do sell but not anywhere nearly as regularly as they used to.

It does seem to be the editing process itself as creating new gigs seems to work the other way round where instead of dropping sales and impressions, these steadily start to increase.

If I was you, I wouldn’t do anything else at all with your gig or gigs. See if sales recover and next time don’t amend your pricing. Instead, create a new gig with a new price structure and start diverting existing buyers to it.

This is 100% accurate. An alternative to this would be if you have a few orders preferably 4 - 7 in queue for the gig. Raise prices, get reviews, and your gig should recover.

Posted

I’m earning less than half what I earned two months ago due to editing my gigs and increasing the prices from $5 to $10 on some. I’m back where I was three years ago income wise.

It’s upsetting to reach an income goal just a few months ago, only to see it set back to my income level three years ago.

My number of completed orders is less than half what it had been. It’s like I am only working ten days a month, income-wise.

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

ordersdown

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

I concur with that…

Posted

I did my first price increase a couple months ago. I went from $5 to $10. No sales for almost two weeks. Then I opted for the packages and the orders returned.

Yesterday I did my second price increase because I was becoming overwhelmed by buyers who were placing $5 orders, asking for elements contained only in my premium gig and then disappearing, never to be heard from again, no matter how many times I emailed them or sent them an extra offer to complete their order.

So I guess I’ll see if there is a drastic drop in orders following yesterday’s changes to my gigs.

Btw: I waited until I had about 5-7 big orders in my queue before editing my gig. Not sure if that will make a difference.

Guest chrispoirier
Posted

This is what I did when I decided to raise my price a few years ago:

I contacted my regular buyers and gave them a heads up that I will be raising my price.

I also added that due to the work load I was getting and also because of the amount of details I put into my work, I strongly believe that it was about time I raised my price.

Surprisingly, most of my regulars understood ( only a handful got upset, one even called me “greedy”) and I went ahead and raised the price a few days later.

A few buyers messaged me saying that raising the price is a good idea, and that I have every right to do so. They also added that people will always understand the value of hard work and will be willing to pay. That really made me happy.

I guess the bottom line is, as long as you are good at what you do, there will always be people who are willing to pay for that.

It looks like you have great reviews, that itself should be enough to attract buyers.

I’m sure you will get new customers, and I’m also sure a good number of your past clients will contact you again.

Holy what! One of them called you greedy… It’s unreal the kind of responses you can sometimes get. Good thing almost all the time the clients are nice though! Thanks for the heads up and tips about this!

Posted

I think that editing your gig in any way affects your visibility for a while. That said I have raised my prices twice since I started selling on Fiverr a year ago. At the price of $5 I was getting way too many orders to publish guest posts on my website, plus the biggest issue is that the articles were mostly terrible quality so I had to reject a lot of the orders. I found when I increased my price to $10 the orders did slow down quite a lot but I was earning more for my time so I was happy with that. And the quality of the articles being sent to me improved big time! I have just increased my price to $15 about a week ago and I have still received a few orders.

What I do is email my regular buyers and let them know about the price increase and I let them know they can order at the old rate for a period of time, I include a custom offer with the message.

It has worked well for me.

Posted

The best stance to take is that it won’t recover. Take your service and replicate it off Fiverr in a way where you have more control over the amount of traffic gets directed at your ‘gig.’ Fiverr and the algorithm can’t be challenged or realistically worked with.

Fiverr and the algorithm can’t be challenged or realistically worked with.

We need to feel that it’s safe and productive to edit our gigs. I need to be able to edit my prices.

Posted

I’m earning less than half what I earned two months ago due to editing my gigs and increasing the prices from $5 to $10 on some. I’m back where I was three years ago income wise.

It’s upsetting to reach an income goal just a few months ago, only to see it set back to my income level three years ago.

My number of completed orders is less than half what it had been. It’s like I am only working ten days a month, income-wise.

Do NOT edit your gigs. Do NOT raise prices. Don’t change anything, ever.

ordersdown

Its seems like august was nearly $1000 to $1200 , September was $800 above and October is like 500$ so far… Its seriously downfall in sales, you should not raise your prices if its not working well for you.

Mine slowest month was September which was like your October.

Posted

Holy what! One of them called you greedy… It’s unreal the kind of responses you can sometimes get. Good thing almost all the time the clients are nice though! Thanks for the heads up and tips about this!

Yup, my jaw dropped when I first read the message. This buyer was my regular and he was very happy with my work and always added that he could get GREAT service with such a darn low price. So even after I have raised my price I thought it would be ( it actually is!) still quite cheap, but nope, he got upset. It’s OK though, I got PLENTY orders from other nice clients so no problem. It did take me a few hours to brush that off completely though, it’s amazing that one little word “greedy” makes you cringe so much!!

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