Many of our prospects (and buyers of any good or service) fall victim of fixating on the one hard criteria (quoted price) they can compare, granting it far more weight than it deserves in the determination of both “real cost” and value.
Below is the comparison table this client used to explain to Senior Management why a more “expensive” near shore location can actually be less expensive in terms of Total Cost of Ownership (TCO):
Every client has a different model for evaluating value, by giving different weights to different criteria. In the case above, they valued collaboration and coordination, inflation factors, travel costs, hiring, training and retention costs, efficacy (or efficiency) of development, and ramp up speed. It is important for clients to give hard thought to this and to even list, weigh and measure each criterion that contributes to the value of a relationship. That way it will be harder to mistakenly gravitate towards a simplistic price quote.