
So I preserve family heirlooms, organize photo collections, and digitize any/all things. I have 5 years experience in museum-level archiving and curation of NA artifacts, documents, and biological specimens.Now i've turned that into a business where even your average (moderately cushy incomed) family can have their inherited collections digitized and preserved like they are in museums.I have a return customer that was so thrilled with our first go-around that he said he wants to entrust our business to, get this, literally handle and preserve letters and passports that belong to the client's family that were on display in The Jewish Museum in NYC.So, first, holy fuck are we thrilled to be entrusted with such an honor. We are so happy that we have a return customer who has something relatively challenging for us to handle. We're so thrilled we have a return customer in the first place...I don't have any prices advertised for this service yet. And this situation is the particular reason why we haven't put any up.We need legal advice fast, and we don't really even know what to LOOK FOR in a lawyer. aaaaaaaaaaaAlso, how do we even price this? We've scanned and organized documents for $1.50 a page at $26/hr, but I'll be damned if I give that price to historic documents of museum-level significance. No way. You're going to have to threw a few nickels my way for me to even touch those. That requires handling of items not in your typical 'professional organizer' fashion. I went to school to learn how to handle paper so brittle, it breaks if you breathe in its direction. It will take much more time, and probably materials, for me to accomplish this.I knew i'd have to nail down my price structure, but for some reason I didn't expect it to be now. (???) (Why have I been so naive?) At least I am bringing up the question here now and getting in touch with 'T H E L A W' tomorrow.How do you price something that almost nobody else does? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy






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