Cost Guide
Business consulting costs rise with the consultant's seniority and the scope of the work. Independent consultants typically charge $150–$400 per hour, while boutique strategists and large-firm partners run $200–$500 or more. Project engagements are common — a focused strategy or market-entry project often runs $5,000–$25,000, and a multi-month operational overhaul can reach $50,000 or more. Many consultants also offer monthly retainers of $3,000–$15,000 for ongoing advisory. What moves the price most is the consultant's track record and industry depth, your company's complexity, and whether the work is advisory-only or includes implementation.
Hourly rate
$175–$550/hr
Varies based on operating-model depth, sector context, and AI workflow experience
Per session
$250–$900
For a focused 60–90 minute session on workflow design, approvals, or AI operating decisions
Monthly retainer
$4,000–$18,000/month
For ongoing transformation advisory, rollout oversight, or fractional operations leadership
The professional certifying body for management consultants in the US (CMC designation).
Research-backed insights on business strategy, decision-making, and organizational change.
Budget
$100–$175/hr
Typical for: Generalist consultants, early independents, or operators offering lightweight advisory
Best for: Early thinking on AI adoption, light process mapping, or prioritizing what to review next
Mid-range
$175–$325/hr
Typical for: Sector-aware independents, boutique consulting alumni, or experienced operators with transformation experience
Best for: Workflow redesign, role and approval mapping, AI operating policies, and pilot planning
Premium
$325–$550+/hr
Typical for: Former strategy leaders, transformation executives, or consultants with deep AI operating-model and governance experience
Best for: Cross-functional AI transformation, governance design, high-stakes operating model changes, and executive decision support
If you are pricing more specialized work, one of these related professional roles may match the engagement better.
Executive coaches
Leadership development, team performance, and career-transition coaching for founders and senior operators.
HR consultants
People strategy, employment compliance, compensation, and talent management for growing teams.
Financial planning consultants
Retirement planning, investment strategy, tax efficiency, and wealth management for owners and operators.
Startup lawyers
Incorporation, equity, cap table structuring, and fundraising documents for early-stage companies.
LLC (Limited Liability Company)
An LLC (Limited Liability Company) is a business structure that provides its owners (called members) with personal liability protection — meaning your personal assets are generally protected from business debts and lawsuits — while offering flexible taxation options.
Sole Proprietorship
A sole proprietorship is the simplest business structure — a business owned and operated by one person with no legal distinction between the owner and the business. It requires no formal registration, but the owner has unlimited personal liability for all business debts and legal claims.
Go-to-Market Strategy
A go-to-market (GTM) strategy is the plan a company uses to bring a product or service to market — defining the target customer, value proposition, pricing, distribution channels, and sales motion.
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) is the total cost of acquiring one new customer — including all sales and marketing expenses divided by the number of new customers acquired in a given period.
Due Diligence
Due diligence is the process of thoroughly investigating a person, company, or asset before entering into a significant transaction or agreement. It is most commonly associated with mergers and acquisitions, investments, and real estate transactions.
Joint Venture
A joint venture (JV) is a business arrangement where two or more parties agree to pool resources for a specific project or business activity while maintaining their separate legal identities.
Product-Market Fit
Product-market fit (PMF) is the degree to which a product satisfies strong market demand. A company has PMF when its product meets a genuine need so well that customers return, refer others, and would be significantly disappointed if it disappeared. It is widely considered the most critical milestone for early-stage companies.