When you first start looking for a supplier to help you build an online course, you quickly learn one uncomfortable truth…
The quotes can be all over the place.
Two proposals can look identical on paper. Same number of modules, same delivery timeframe. Yet one’s triple the cost. And that’s usually where the head tilt happens.
“Wait, how can they be so different?”
We see this all the time at Oppida. And here’s the thing…
The difference rarely comes down to “expensive” or “cheap” providers. It comes down to what’s inside the quote. The way effort, risk, and accountability are structured, for example.
So instead of asking “How much does it cost?” try asking “What’s driving that cost?”, and “How does it connect to real learning impact?”
That’s where the clarity (and value) lives.
No two learning projects are the same. A sound proposal reflects a combination of design decisions and delivery conditions:
Simple compliance refresher takes different work than a multi-pathway simulation.
Every extra reviewer adds time and coordination effort.
WCAG standards, captioning, and QA matter for all learners.
SCORM, xAPI, or LMS analytics each require testing.
Video and animation can add polish, but not always value.
If you’ve seen a few different agency quotes, you’ve probably noticed that they can be structured in completely different ways. Here’s how to decode them (no MBA required).
|
Model |
How it works |
Strength |
What to clarify |
|
Fixed project |
One total fee for a clearly defined scope. |
Predictable budget. |
How are revisions or scope changes handled? |
|
Milestone-based |
Payments tied to design, build, QA, and delivery stages. |
Transparency and shared accountability. |
What acceptance tests confirm each milestone? |
|
Hourly / time-and-materials |
Pay for actual hours logged. |
Flexible when scope is evolving. |
Ask for time tracking and weekly summaries. |
|
Per learning hour |
Fee per finished hour of content. |
Easy to benchmark across vendors. |
What’s included in “one learning hour” (QA, accessibility, support?) |
|
Subscription/retainer |
Monthly development allowance. |
Predictable costs for ongoing work. |
What happens if hours roll over or priorities shift? |
At Oppida, we often use fixed or milestone-based pricing because it gives both sides confidence. You see exactly what’s being delivered and when, AND we’re accountable for meeting agreed criteria before the next phase begins.
Because good partnerships aren’t about mystery, but mutual clarity.
Let’s demystify what you’re actually paying for. When you look under the hood of a well-built course, here’s what you’ll usually find:
The learning logic: Objectives, structure, assessments if applicable.
Graphics, animations or videos to engage.
The invisible glue holding timelines, feedback, and SMEs together.
Device testing, LMS compatibility, and accessibility audits.
Every one of these pieces contributes to learner experience.
But not every piece needs to be gold-plated. The art is in balancing what drives impact versus what drives cost.
It’s easy to equate production value with learning value, but they’re not the same thing.
For example, many teams fall into the “more media = better learning” trap. But design drives impact, not production value. Even the most stunning visuals can’t make up for content that lacks clarity or purpose.
It’s a bit like education itself. A well-run classroom doesn’t need fancy tech to achieve deep learning. It needs good pedagogy and a clear purpose.
The same is true online.
Research backs this up.
When a course is built with clear goals and smart design choices (even with simple visuals), learners are far more likely to finish and remember it. In fact, well-structured courses can see engagement and completion rates jump by up to 40%!
ROI in learning isn’t measured by how cinematic it looks. It’s measured by:
At Oppida, we look for these efficiencies in every project. It’s how you create impact without waste.
The best courses don’t succeed because they’re expensive.
They succeed because they’re clear, intentional, and deeply relevant to the people who take them.
Even if you’re not in government or higher ed, it helps to think like a procurement officer. Why? Because they’re trained to look past the headline number to what’s being delivered.
They ask:
Those questions protect both parties. And when you start asking them too, you stop feeling like a “client” and start acting like a partner.
Oppida’s proposals always include these elements, not because they’re bureaucratic, but because they give everyone peace of mind. When the rules of the game are clear, everyone wins.
Here’s your quick “vendors cheat sheet” for your next course quote:
Good agencies love these questions. It means you’re serious about outcomes, not just deliverables.
If there’s one takeaway, it’s this:
Your goal isn’t to build a course. It’s to create impact.
Return on investment in learning isn’t a mystery. It’s the relationship between what you spend and what you achieve:
Studies from ATD and Training Industry show professionally designed learning can deliver up to 300% ROI over three years. Not because it’s prettier, but because it’s purposeful, accessible, and reusable.
At Oppida, that’s our compass. Every decision (design, media, delivery) gets weighed against one question:
“Does this make learning more effective or just more expensive?”
Across projects big and small, we’ve learned that clarity is the most powerful currency.
We work milestone by milestone, so you know exactly what’s being delivered and when. We co-design alongside your team, so you build capability, not dependency.
We build accessibility in from day one.
And we hand everything over (source files, documentation, design systems), so your learning investment keeps paying forward.
That’s how you stay in control.
That’s how you make every dollar, and every decision, count.
If you'd like to learn more about how we collaborate, book in a quick discovery call for a chat!
A course quote isn’t just a number, but a reflection of what’s valued, and seeing proposals through the lens of ROI changes everything.
You start to value clarity more than complexity, purpose more than polish, and partnership more than paperwork. As a result, your decisions become smarter, braver, and far more sustainable.
So the next time a proposal lands in your inbox, take a deep breath, grab a coffee, and ask:
“Does this investment lead to impact?”
If the answer’s yes, you’re on the right track!
Book a short conversation with the Oppida team.
We’ll walk you through how a course proposal is structured (milestones, deliverables, and acceptance criteria), so you can make decisions with clarity, confidence, and control.