A fixed marketing package looks cheaper on the quote. The same website template, the same content structure, and the same handful of keywords get sold to every electrician who signs up, which is exactly how the price stays low. The problem shows up later, once you realise your competitor three towns over is running the identical site with the identical copy, and neither of you is winning anything from it.
What a Fixed Package Actually Is
A fixed package is a standardised bundle: a templated website, a set number of generic blog posts, and a basic Google Business Profile setup, sold at the same price and to the same specification regardless of your area, competition, or goals. The appeal is obvious. It is cheap, quick to set up, and easy to compare against other providers on price alone.
The trade-off is that none of it is built around your specific market. Two electricians in different towns can end up with nearly identical websites targeting nearly identical keywords, which works fine until you consider that Google actively ranks unique, locally specific content above generic, templated content covering the same ground.
Where the Hidden Cost Actually Comes From
- Generic content plateaus quickly: templated service and location pages rank initially through basic on-page relevance, then stall, since there is nothing genuinely distinctive for search engines to reward over a competitor running the same template
- No strategic sequencing: a fixed package delivers everything at once with no plan for what comes next once the initial setup is live, unlike a framework built to progress through defined stages
- Limited reporting depth: most fixed packages report basic traffic or ranking numbers rather than cost per lead or cost per booked job, making it hard to judge real return
- Renewal and churn costs: when a fixed package stops producing results, switching providers often means starting over entirely rather than building on existing progress, since little of the original work was genuinely strategic
A Worked Cost Comparison Over Time
Consider two electricians, both starting at a similar point with no existing online presence, and both spending a broadly comparable amount over a year.
| Timeframe | Fixed Package | Bespoke Growth Framework |
|---|---|---|
| Month 1 to 3 | Website and content live quickly, similar cost to bespoke setup | Foundation stage: website fixes, GBP optimisation, review system built |
| Month 4 to 6 | Rankings and leads plateau as templated content competes with similar sites | Momentum stage: paid channels generating leads and early reviews |
| Month 7 to 12 | Cost per lead stays flat or rises as competition increases | Compounding stage: organic leads rising, cost per lead starting to fall |
| Beyond Year 1 | Often requires a full rebuild or provider switch to break the plateau | Continued compounding, expansion into new services or areas |
The fixed package is not necessarily more expensive month to month at the start. The cost gap widens later, once the bespoke approach is generating a rising share of organic, lower-cost leads while the fixed package’s plateau leaves cost per lead unchanged or worse. Our local growth framework covers the specific stages referenced in the table above in more depth.
When a Fixed Package Is Genuinely Fine
This is not a blanket case against every fixed package. They can make sense in a few situations: testing whether digital marketing is worth investing in at all before committing further, a very tight initial budget with plans to upgrade once cash flow allows, or a business in a low-competition area where even generic content ranks acceptably well. The distinction worth making before signing anything is whether the package is a genuine starting point with room to grow, or a permanent ceiling sold as a complete solution.
Our guide to hiring a marketing agency covers the specific questions worth asking to tell the difference before you commit.
FAQs
Is a fixed marketing package always a bad choice?
Not always. It can be a reasonable starting point for testing the water on a tight budget, provided you go in aware that it will likely need upgrading once you want to move past an early plateau.
Why does templated content perform worse than bespoke content over time?
Search engines increasingly reward genuinely unique, locally specific content. Templated pages shared across many similar businesses have nothing distinctive to rank above competitors using the same structure.
How do I know if my current package has hit a plateau?
Flat or declining lead volume over several consecutive months, despite no change in spend, is the clearest sign. Reviewing cost per lead specifically, rather than just traffic or rankings, usually confirms it.
Does switching from a fixed package to a bespoke approach mean starting from zero?
Not entirely. Existing reviews, domain history, and any genuine content already in place usually carry over, though templated pages often need rebuilding rather than simply adjusting.
How can I tell if an agency is selling a fixed package disguised as bespoke work?
Ask specifically what would be different about your strategy compared with another electrician in a different town. A genuinely bespoke approach should have a clear, specific answer.

