Pricing Models Agencies Report Using Today
Pricing is a core part of how agencies operate, yet it is rarely discussed in isolation. In Agency Core research, pricing appears alongside broader operational pressures, client expectations, and questions of value. This blog surfaces how agencies report structuring their pricing today, based on aggregated research findings, without evaluating outcomes or recommending approaches.
The sections that follow describe pricing models agencies say they are using and the context in which those models appear. The focus remains on reported patterns and variation across agencies, reflecting the industry as it describes itself.
Pricing As An Operational Reality For Agencies
Pricing models are reported as one element within a wider set of operational decisions agencies manage daily. Agency leaders often reference pricing when discussing workload balance, client relationships, and the nature of the work their teams deliver.
Rather than standing alone, pricing is intertwined with how agencies scope work, staff projects, and communicate value to clients. In the research, pricing is consistently framed as part of running the business, not as a standalone lever.
-
Pricing Within Broader Reported Challenges
Agency leaders report pricing concerns alongside other pressures, including pipeline development, staffing costs, and shifting client expectations. Pricing is not isolated as a technical decision, but as something shaped by market conditions and client behavior.
In this context, pricing models are often discussed in relation to sustainability and predictability, rather than optimization or growth. Agencies describe pricing as something they manage within constraints, not something they fully control.
-
Value Perception And Compensation Concerns
The 2025 research shows that many agency leaders identify getting paid appropriately as a significant challenge. This concern appears across agency sizes and segments, suggesting that pricing models are closely tied to how agencies believe clients perceive their value.
Pricing, in this sense, reflects more than math or margins. It reflects how agencies experience conversations about worth, scope, and expectations, as reported through the research.
Common Pricing Models Agencies Report Using
Across the Agency Core data, agencies report using a range of pricing models. No single model dominates all others, and many agencies describe using more than one approach depending on the type of work or client relationship.
These models are described here as reported, without judgment or implied preference.
-
Hourly And Time-Based Pricing
Some agencies report pricing their work based on time, using hourly or time-tracked rates. This model is often referenced in connection with defined scopes, fluctuating workloads, or projects where effort is difficult to predict in advance.
Agencies using time-based pricing frequently describe it as familiar and straightforward, particularly for certain types of execution-focused work.
-
Project-Based Pricing
Project-based pricing is commonly reported for defined initiatives with clear deliverables. Agencies describe setting a fixed price based on scope, timeline, and expected effort, rather than tracking time throughout the engagement.
This approach is often mentioned in relation to client expectations for clarity and predictability around cost.
-
Retainer And Ongoing Engagement Models
Many agencies report using retainer-based pricing for ongoing relationships. These models are typically described as monthly or recurring arrangements tied to a defined set of services or capacity.
Retainers are often discussed in the context of long-term client relationships and recurring work, rather than one-off projects.
-
Other Reported Or Hybrid Approaches
In addition to these common models, agencies also report hybrid or blended approaches. These may combine elements of retainers, projects, and time-based pricing, depending on client needs or internal operations.
The presence of hybrid models highlights that many agencies adapt pricing structures rather than relying on a single, uniform approach.
Variation In Pricing Models Across Agencies
Agency Core research reflects that pricing models are not applied uniformly across the agency landscape. Agencies report differences in how they price based on structural factors and the context in which they operate.
These variations appear as descriptive patterns rather than clear divisions, reinforcing that pricing is shaped by multiple internal and external factors.
-
Differences By Agency Size Or Structure
Agencies of different sizes report different pricing considerations. Smaller agencies often reference pricing in relation to capacity limits and workload balance, while larger agencies more frequently describe pricing as part of broader operational systems.
Structure also plays a role. Agencies with specialized services may describe pricing differently than those offering a wide range of services, particularly when scoping work or defining ongoing engagements.
-
Observed Differences Across Attitudinal Segments
The Agency Core 2025 Research identifies distinct attitudinal segments among agency leaders, and pricing-related pressures appear across all of them. While the research does not position any segment as using a superior model, it does show that leaders experience pricing challenges differently depending on their mindset and circumstances.
For some segments, pricing is discussed alongside uncertainty and pressure from clients. For others, it appears more closely tied to operational consistency and long-term relationships. These differences reflect perspective and context rather than specific pricing mechanics.
How Pricing Models Appear Alongside Reported Agency Pressures
Pricing models do not exist independently of the pressures agencies report facing. In the research, pricing is often referenced alongside discussions of workload mix, client expectations, and the evolving role of agencies.
This positioning suggests that pricing is experienced as part of a broader system, rather than as a single decision point.
-
Pricing And Strategic Versus Tactical Work
Agencies frequently describe tension between strategic and tactical work, and pricing models often intersect with this balance. Some leaders report that pricing structures are shaped by how work is scoped and how value is communicated to clients.
In this context, pricing reflects how agencies define and package their work, rather than simply how they calculate fees.
-
Pricing And Client Expectations
Client expectations are a recurring theme in the research, and pricing models are often discussed in relation to what clients expect to receive. Agencies report navigating expectations around deliverables, responsiveness, and perceived value.
Pricing, as described by agency leaders, becomes one of several ways these expectations are managed and negotiated within client relationships.
What The Reported Data Reveals About Pricing Today
Taken together, the Agency Core research shows that pricing models are diverse and context-dependent across agencies. No single approach is reported as standard, and many agencies describe using multiple models simultaneously to reflect different types of work and client relationships.
Pricing is consistently framed as an operational reality shaped by market pressure, client behavior, and internal capacity. Rather than indicating stability or consensus, the data highlights variation and adaptation as common characteristics of how agencies price their services today.
Pricing models also appear closely tied to broader conversations about value, scope, and sustainability. Agencies report navigating these issues in different ways, reflecting differences in structure, mindset, and circumstances rather than clear alignment around a single pricing approach.
Reflecting On Reported Pricing Models Across Agencies
The Agency Core 2025 Research surfaces pricing as an integral part of how agencies experience their work and relationships with clients. Agencies report using a mix of hourly, project-based, retainer, and hybrid pricing models, often adjusting structures based on context rather than following a fixed formula.
Across the data, pricing emerges as a shared area of complexity rather than a settled practice. By describing how agencies report pricing their services today, this research provides visibility into the range of approaches in use, without positioning any model as preferred or prescriptive.

