I priced my services based purely on the actual hours spent doing the visible, billable work, client calls, deliverables, direct project time, for almost a year before I actually tracked how many additional hours went into the surrounding, invisible work that made that billable time possible at all. The real number, once I tracked it honestly for a month, was almost as large as my billable hours themselves, and none of it had been factored into my pricing at all.
This is one of the most common and most expensive pricing mistakes solo operators make, not because the visible work is priced incorrectly, but because an entire second category of real, necessary work goes completely unaccounted for in the pricing calculation.
What “Invisible” Work Actually Includes
Sales and business development time that doesn’t directly bill to any specific client. Every hour spent on a discovery call that doesn’t convert, every proposal written for a project that doesn’t happen, every piece of marketing content created to attract future clients, is real, necessary time that supports the business’s ability to generate revenue at all, and none of it shows up as billable hours to any specific existing client.
Administrative work: invoicing, bookkeeping, scheduling, and general operations. These tasks are genuinely necessary to running the business and consume real time every week, time that a solo operator absorbs personally, unlike a larger company where administrative functions are typically separate roles with their own dedicated budget line, rather than uncompensated time layered directly onto the same person doing the billable work.
Ongoing learning and skill maintenance required to remain genuinely competitive. Staying current in most fields requires real, ongoing time investment, and a solo operator absorbs that time personally, without an employer’s training budget or dedicated professional development time to offset it.
Client communication and coordination that falls outside a specific deliverable’s direct scope. Responding to a quick clarifying question, coordinating scheduling, handling a minor adjustment request, all real time that often doesn’t map neatly onto a specific billable deliverable, and accumulates into a genuinely significant weekly total when tracked honestly.
Why This Category Gets Ignored So Consistently
Visible, billable work feels like the “real” work, the thing clients are directly paying for, while invisible work feels like background overhead that shouldn’t factor into pricing the same way. This framing is intuitive and also fundamentally incomplete, since invisible work is genuinely necessary for the billable work to happen at all, and a business’s pricing needs to account for the full time investment required to sustain itself, not just the portion a client directly sees and interacts with.
I hadn’t tracked my own invisible work specifically because it felt separate from “the actual job,” a framing that quietly meant I was pricing my time as if a meaningful chunk of my actual weekly work simply didn’t exist or didn’t need to be compensated at all.
How to Actually Calculate This Into Your Pricing
Track your actual time honestly for two to four weeks, separating visible billable work from invisible supporting work. This tracking period is essential, since most solo operators significantly underestimate their invisible work time when relying on a rough, unmeasured guess rather than genuine, tracked data.
Calculate the ratio between the two categories from your actual tracked data. My own honest tracking revealed roughly 35% of my total working time went to invisible work, a considerably higher proportion than I’d have guessed before actually measuring it directly.
Build that ratio into your effective hourly rate calculation. If your target take-home rate is a specific number per billable hour, and invisible work represents 35% of your total time, your actual billable rate needs to account for that additional, uncompensated time, effectively meaning your quoted rate needs to be meaningfully higher than a naive calculation based purely on billable hours would suggest, in order for your genuine effective hourly earnings across your full working time to actually reach your real target.
What Changed Once I Actually Fixed This
Once I recalculated my pricing to account for the real, tracked ratio of invisible to billable work, I raised my rates by roughly 30%, a number directly tied to actual tracked data rather than an arbitrary increase. Client pushback was minimal, far less than I’d anticipated, and my actual effective hourly earnings across my full working week, not just billable hours, increased meaningfully for the first time since starting the business.
What to Do Now
Track your actual time honestly for the next two weeks, separating visible, billable work from every category of invisible supporting work: sales and business development, administration, ongoing learning, and unbilled client coordination. Calculate the real ratio from that data, not a guess, and use it to reassess whether your current pricing genuinely accounts for the full time your business actually requires to operate, not just the portion a client directly sees.