One of the most frequently asked question on Mygirlfund is how much do I sell my content for? Putting a price tag on your personal collection isn’t always easy. Prices and amount of content will vary greatly from girl to girl. You need to decide what you want to offer and how much it is worth to you.
If you want to charge higher rates, you have to make it worth it to the person buying your content. The higher the quality the more money you can charge. The more “graphic” the content is, the more money you can charge. We have noticed that “First-time” videos make more as well. When making and selling content you have to consider how you will package it. (By package, we mean how you will present it to your friends, and clients.) If you have high quality content and poor packaging then your sales are not maximized. If you have low quality content that is packaged well, your buyers will feel let down. Advertise what you have to accurately reflect your content. Set your starting point and make production goals. Keep track of your progress, learn, grow, and charge what you are worth. Supply and demand plays a large part in this process. If you make content that the other girls don’t have, as long as the market demands it, you can charge more for it!
Create new material on a regular basis.
Reach out to new people daily, and watch your connections grow. Once you have followers you will want to keep them. Let your friends, and high contributors help decide what you include in upcoming content. They will be more likely to come back to your page, if they are asked what they want to see more of. The more return customers and friends you have the more money you will make. When deciding what to promote, your tasks becomes easier when you have followers letting you know what they want. If your followers are return clients then you will have an easier time of pricing of your production as well.
When making your content you want to set yourself a reasonable timeline. Always keep your production times as low as possible with a standard quality in mind. Leave yourself time for editing, uploading, and even re-shooting if needed. A good rule is to always under promise and over deliver. A week turnaround time for a custom video is a little on the lengthy side, but definitely not unheard of, and completely acceptable if the result is worth the wait! Let your buyer know how long it will take, and give yourself some extra time. If you promise a 10 min video and need more time in your video, don’t feel bad about making a 15 min video for the original price.
Make content you are personally proud of. If you make content you don’t like, you are less likely to want to advertise it. Make content you like, and are good at making. If you are uncomfortable with a request you shouldn’t make it. Everyone wants something different, and every girl specializes in a different niche. Be honest with your comfort level. Make the best content you can, and you will get paid what you are worth.
When it comes to camming, it gets tricky! Do you charge by the minute? By the show? Do you charge more for naughty chat, or if the client wants to cam to cam? All of these choices are yours to make. The best advice we can give you here at TMGFR, is to make sure your production value is high. Utilize great (not good) lighting, and make plenty of eye contact with the cam. Let your customer know that you are there with them. Never give them the impression that you are bored, or pre-occupied, deliver on what you market, or promise, and you will probably be able to charge at least $3.00 a minute for cam shows. Camming can be a significant source of income on MGF, as well as an awesome way to connect one on one with your fans and friends. Make full use of the advantage that it gives you over the majority of the other girls, who don’t usually cam!
Never let your clients talk you down from your price. This is considered highly rude and disrespectful. Tell them if they want to haggle, and devalue your efforts, they might have better luck with that at other more crowded websites, that deal in quantity over quality. MGF allows you to get paid to make virtual connections and relationships first, and content second. This crucial difference means that you are more empowered, and less likely to compromise yourself in the long run.
Do you have any tips that might help girls figure out the best way to approach content pricing? Let us know in the comments below!
I’m thinking of charging a little less than I believe is my worth in the beginning. My contents are not up to par with the quality to yours, but it’s definitely not amateurish. I plan to charge a fair price once I have a loyal following, but until then I think it’s probably a good idea to not undercharge too much, but to keep the price slightly lower than what the market might dictate.
We agree. It is a lot harder to raise your prices, then it is to lower them.
The market will tell you when you are charging too much. Your traffic will stay the same, but people will buy less. This is a clue that perhaps your prices are too high. You never actually know if they are too low. The market might even stop buying because they are too low! People don’t trust cheaply priced goods and services. If you undervalue your content, then so will everyone else.
Understood. It’s not a good idea undercharge. Not that you’d want to do either, but I suppose undercharging is even worse idea than overcharging. I didn’t really think of it that way, I guess I didn’t realize how challenging it would be to raise the price once you set a certain expectation point to your clients. I won’t make that mistake. Thanks for the protip!
A good many vlauabels you’ve given me.
It’s always a rleeif when someone with obvious expertise answers. Thanks!
Of all things that would be challenging about getting started with Mygirlfund, I never thought pricing would be one of them. I still have no idea how much I’m supposed to charge for my work and I was thinking I should go cheap, but then this article has got me thinking again that it would be a bad idea to price cheaply. Maybe I should look at other works and try to find the middle ground, instead of trying to put a number on my work by my standard.
I suppose it’s important that I don’t overprice with my contents, but I’m very confident that I’ve got some of the best amateur work out there. At first if I’m going to make a mistake, I rather overcharge than undercharge. Once you set the price people will expect to get your content at a certain price level and raising the price from that threshold will be very difficult. I’ll go the safe route and start high.
I’ll start at a happy medium between cheap and average price, then eventually as my contents get more popular I will improve on my contents and charge more accordingly. My contents are not going to be all that great in the beginning, but I know I will improve. I think it’s only fair that I charge low during my learning process and hopefully my fans by then will understand that as the quality of my content goes up, so will the price.
The amount is unnoimrtapt as long as it is less than the limit. Paying the bill on-time each month is the important thing since each on-time payment adds to your credit score. However, each missed payment will significantly reduce your credit score much more than on-time payments.
I’ll look over the pricing of others and try to see how much I should charge, but at the same token I don’t want to think too much about money right now. For the time being I want to concentrate on uploading as much content as I can and make as good of contents as I can and I’ll charge up to the level that I feel comfortable. If I’m proud of my work then I’ll charge accordingly, but some of the works that are less than optimal I’ll charge less. I’ll keep things simple.
I find it hard to come up with my worth. I provide really good quality stuff but then guys are expecting me to take a few dollars for tons of content. Like a guy wanted 15 high quality photos for 15 dollars. I think I’m worth twice that much. But idk
Do you have to do videos can you just stick with pics.,?