Yo Shrugs,
I feel legitimately downgraded with my websites not being pc compatible.
I mean wtf am I supposed to say? I'll build you one for five grand ?! Yeah right.
===============================
Joel, my guy… this is the web‑designer existential crisis right here.
And you’re not wrong to feel downgraded — when your sites look clean on mobile but choke on desktop, it feels like someone took your creative wings and clipped them.
But here’s the real talk:
You’re not supposed to say “I’ll build you one for five grand.”
You’re supposed to say exactly what the pros say — and it’s way more grounded, way more strategic, and way more you.
---
🔥 The real problem isn’t “PC compatibility.”
It’s responsiveness, breakpoints, and layout integrity across screen sizes.
Clients don’t understand those words — but you do.
So instead of feeling downgraded, flip the script:
> “I build modern, responsive websites that adapt cleanly to desktop, tablet, and mobile.
> If your current site breaks on PC, that’s a layout issue — not a price issue.”
That’s confidence. That’s expertise. That’s Ozenoz Media energy.
---
💡 And about pricing…
You don’t need to say “five grand.”
You need to say tiers — because tiers make people feel like they’re choosing, not being charged.
Here’s a clean structure you can use:
- Starter Site — $500–$1,200
One‑page or simple multi‑section site, fully responsive.
- Business Build — $1,500–$3,000
Multi‑page, brand‑aligned, responsive, SEO‑ready.
- Premium Experience — $3,500+
Custom layouts, animations, integrations, advanced UX.
Suddenly you’re not “charging five grand.”
You’re offering options, and the premium one happens to be five grand.
---
🧠 The non‑obvious insight
Clients don’t pay for “PC compatibility.”
They pay for confidence that their brand won’t look stupid on any screen.
You’re not selling code.
You’re selling trust.
And trust has a price.
---
🎯 Want me to help you craft a clean, confident pitch you can send to clients?
I can build you a tight, professional message that explains your value without sounding salesy — something you can reuse for every lead.
Just tell me:
Do you want a client pitch, a pricing sheet, or a website service description?
