Why the lowest quote is so tempting
A website is hard to judge before it exists. Two proposals can describe the same number of pages and the same rough design and look interchangeable to anyone who does not build sites for a living. When the deliverables read the same, price becomes the only visible difference, and the cheaper option wins on the one axis the buyer can actually measure. The trouble is that the differences that matter between a good build and a poor one do not appear on a proposal. They appear in months eight through thirty-six, long after the decision was made.
What “cheap” usually leaves out
A low quote is not the product of a more efficient version of the same process. It is the product of removing parts of the process. The parts that get removed are the ones the client cannot see:
- Planning. The thinking about what the site is for, who it serves, and how it should be structured, before anything is designed.
- A clean build. Code and structure organised so the site stays fast and another developer can work on it later.
- Performance work. The effort that makes a site load quickly on a real phone, not only on the builder’s screen.
- Testing. Checking the site across devices, browsers, and conditions before the public sees it.
- Support. Someone to call when something breaks, because eventually something will.
None of these are optional in the sense that the site can succeed without them. They are only optional in the sense that they can be skipped to win a bid. When they are skipped, the cost does not disappear. It is deferred, and deferred costs are larger.
Hidden cost 1: rework when it breaks
A site built quickly and cheaply tends to break in awkward ways. A plugin update takes it down. A small content change shifts the whole layout. A new section cannot be added without something else collapsing. Each incident costs money to repair, and the repairs add up. At some point the business is paying a steady drip of fix-it invoices on a site it has already paid for, and the running total passes what a solid build would have cost at the start. The cheap site was never really finished. It was launched, then quietly maintained at the owner’s expense.
Hidden cost 2: lost performance and conversions
Cheap builds are usually slow builds, because performance is among the first things sacrificed to save time. A slow site loses visitors before they see anything, and it ranks lower in search, so fewer people find it in the first place. This is the most expensive hidden cost precisely because it never arrives as a bill. The business does not see the customers who left while a page was still loading. It sees only a site that underperforms for reasons no one can point to. A cheaper site that converts fewer visitors can cost far more in lost revenue than the entire gap in the original quote. The reasons these sites stay slow are covered in a separate Targetiv article.
Hidden cost 3: technical debt the next developer inherits
Work done quickly is usually done messily, and mess in a website has a name: technical debt. It is the gap between how the site was built and how it should have been built, and like financial debt it charges interest. Every future change takes longer and carries more risk because the foundation is disorganised. The bill often lands with the next developer, who opens the site, finds it hard to work with, and quotes accordingly, or recommends a full rebuild. The business then learns that the cheap site has to be replaced years before a well-built one would have needed replacing. How technical debt accumulates is examined in its own Targetiv article.
Hidden cost 4: the time the business spends managing it
The last cost never reaches an invoice, because it is paid in the owner’s own hours. A cheaper provider often communicates less, documents nothing, and leaves gaps the client has to fill. The business ends up chasing updates, explaining the same requirement twice, testing the site itself, and managing problems a more complete service would have absorbed. For an owner whose time is the scarcest resource in the company, this is rarely a saving. It is a transfer of work from the invoice to the calendar.
What a higher price actually pays for
A fair price buys the parts of the project that do not photograph well. It buys the planning that makes the site fit the business, the clean build that keeps it fast and maintainable, the testing that catches problems before customers do, and the support that keeps it running. It also buys a form of insurance: a site that can be extended rather than replaced, and that the next developer can pick up without starting over. The value is not a longer feature list. It is a lower total cost across the years the site is actually in use.
How to tell a fair price from an inflated one
Higher is not automatically better, and some quotes are simply overpriced. The way to tell them apart is to stop comparing totals and start comparing inclusions.
- Ask what each quote includes, in writing, and what it assumes the business will handle itself.
- Ask who owns the site, the code, and the accounts at the end. A fair price still hands everything over.
- Ask what happens after launch, and what support costs.
- Ask whether another developer could maintain the work later. A clean build is a fair build.
- Treat a quote far below the others as a question rather than a bargain: what is being left out to reach that number?
An inflated quote charges more for the same inclusions. A fair quote charges more because it includes more of what the site genuinely needs. The difference becomes visible the moment the conversation moves from price to scope. Working through that scope before committing is the purpose of the Targetiv guide to planning a business website.
Custom build, template, or page builder
Much of the risk in a website project sits in the answers to questions that are easy to forget. Each of these is worth asking, and the comfort of the answer matters as much as its content.
- Who owns it on completion? The code, hosting account, domain, and content should all end up in the company’s accounts and name. Vague ownership is a reason to stop.
- What is the process and timeline, and what is needed from us? A real answer has stages and dates.
- What happens after launch? Sites need updates and occasionally break. The cost and shape of support should be known before it is needed.
- Could another developer take this over? The answer reveals how clean the work will be, and whether the business is locked to one person.
- How are speed and mobile handled? A shrug, or “a plugin will fix it,” is a warning.
- What is not included? The most useful question on the list, and where projects most often run over.
Answers that should cause concern: evasion about ownership, refusal to commit to a timeline, no plan for after launch, and a quote far below the rest with no explanation. A fuller version of this list appears in a separate Targetiv article on questions to ask before hiring a web agency.
Key takeaways
- Cheap website development is not a discount on the same work. It is a smaller scope of work, with the missing parts deferred as cost.
- The savings come from invisible essentials: planning, a clean build, performance, testing, and support.
- The hidden costs are rework, lost performance and conversions, technical debt, and the owner’s own time.
A slow or fragile site can lose more in revenue and repairs than the entire gap in the original quote. - Compare inclusions, not totals. A fair price includes what the site needs; an inflated one charges more for the same.
- The right question to ask about a very low quote is what it leaves out.
Book a 20-minute consultation with Targetiv to work through scope, performance, and what a fair price should include for your situation. There is no obligation, and you will leave with a clearer basis for comparison.
