Quote:
Originally Posted by Darkhorse
I understand it’s a discovery platform, but even with multiple layers, the layout overwhelms rather than guides. More surface area does not replace hierarchy, spacing, or clarity, and with this demo layout users will struggle to find what matters, likely leading to a high bounce rate.
That said, I’m sure for a product you’ve spent over $80K on, you’ve done internal testing and iterations on the front-end, so I may well be wrong.
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Given there are over 100k lines of code behind it, $80k is not some absurd number at all. People keep talking about the frontend as if that alone defines the cost, but the spend covers the full product: architecture, backend, licensing, deployment logic, infra, performance work, admin controls, provider handling, compliance, and everything else under the hood.
You can argue about layout choices, sure. But reducing the value of a system like this to a quick visual judgment on the demo front end misses most of what was actually built.
For context, current market rates are nowhere near “cheap rebuild” territory. On Upwork, software developers are commonly listed around $10–$100/hr, with expert rates at $70–$150+/hr, and full-stack developers often around $16–$35/hr on the lower-to-mid marketplace range. Clutch also shows many software agencies charging about $24–$49/hr, while Arc’s vetted freelance software-development rates average around $81–$100/hr.
Just imagine that all of this is being offered to you turnkey, with 1 year of included support, for only $600 per domain license. Do you seriously think rebuilding the same thing from scratch would cost you the same money? If you’re lucky, it would cost far more in both time and budget.