The real cost depends on scope
A local business may need service pages, visibility work, intake fixes, follow-up improvements, reporting, and a cleaner customer path. If the provider handles more of that execution, the monthly price rises, but the owner also avoids more weekly work.
Cheap is not always lower cost
A low monthly fee can still be expensive if the owner has to manage tools, chase freelancers, sit through strategy calls, or guess whether anything is improving. The true cost includes owner time, missed follow-up, and how long it takes to turn attention into booked work.
What JUJUBOOST charges
JUJUBOOST publishes fixed monthly packages: Starter at $1,000, Growth at $2,500, and Pro at $5,000. The point is simple pricing, public terms, and a managed execution path the owner can understand before registering.
What to compare before buying
Compare public price, what execution is included, whether you still have to operate software, how reporting works, what the minimum term is, and how cancellation works after that. A serious service should make those terms easy to see before any demo call.
Where JUJUBOOST fits
JUJUBOOST is for local owners who want the work handled and the price visible up front. The customer picks a package, shares the business details we ask for, and gets clear progress plus plain monthly reporting without managing the tools personally.
Questions local owners ask
Why does done-for-you marketing cost more than software?
Software is usually cheaper because the owner or team still operates it. Done-for-you service costs more because someone else is handling the execution work, updates, and reporting.
Does JUJUBOOST hide the price behind a sales call?
No. JUJUBOOST shows the package prices publicly so an owner can compare the cost before registering or booking anything.
What is the minimum commitment?
JUJUBOOST packages have a two-month minimum so setup work, landing pages, and early measurement have time to become useful. After that, the service continues month to month with 30 days notice.
How should a local business decide what price is worth it?
Judge the price against owner time, lead quality, booked work, clarity of reporting, and whether the service removes real operational burden. A cheaper offer is not better if it still leaves the owner doing the hard part.