The Flat Markup Habit That Quietly Eats Margin
Most agencies price a white label retainer the way they'd price a lunch special: pick a number that feels fair, tack it onto whatever the fulfillment partner charges, and call it done. That approach holds up fine when volume never changes, but volume always changes, and that's exactly where flat markups fall apart. Agency Elevation runs a white label pricing model that scales with account count, from $199 to $799 a month depending on how many accounts a partner carries.
Agencies that never revisit their resale number after signing that first client get quietly punished by that movement, because the wholesale cost underneath them keeps shifting while the invoice they send stays exactly the same. An agency that locked in a $500 markup while paying $799 a seat is charging $1,299 for the account and sitting on roughly 39 percent gross margin. The same agency, six months later, now paying just $299 per seat because its account volume grew into a cheaper tier, is still billing that client the same $1,299 and pocketing roughly a 77 percent margin on it, often without ever noticing the shift. That 38-point gap isn't a rounding error; it's the difference between a service line that funds a new hire and one that merely breaks even.
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