Operatix Pricing & Cost

How much does Operatix cost? Here is everything we could verify about Operatix's pricing model, what's included, and the terms — with the sources each figure was traced from.

  • Pricing model: Custom-quoted outsourced SDR / sales development engagement, primarily sold as a monthly retainer or project-based program. Operatix describes programs as tailored to business goals, SDR resource requirements, target regions, sales-cycle length, deal value, and desired pipeline; third-party directory/category sources also classify the firm under monthly retainer / project-based billing.
  • Starting price: $5,000+ project minimum
  • Typical range: $10,000 to $49,999 per engagement
  • Billing: Custom quote; evidence points to monthly retainer and sometimes project-based engagements rather than public per-lead or per-appointment pricing.
  • Contract terms: Historically, Operatix said typical new clients begin with a 3-month to 6-month pilot program; long-term agreements may follow.

What's included

  • Outbound sales development
  • Pipeline generation
  • Appointment setting / qualified sales meetings
  • Inbound response management and lead qualification
  • Account-based marketing and account-based selling activities
  • International market entry support with multilingual SDR coverage
  • Channel program activation and acceleration
  • Prospecting into target accounts
  • Meeting coordination and invitation management
  • CRM-integrated reporting and process feedback

Operatix itself does not publish fixed rates on its site; its FAQ explicitly says there is no set pricing and quotes depend on objectives, required resources, sales-cycle length, average deal value, and pipeline goals. The most concrete public numbers I found are third-party directory/review figures: Clutch shows a $5,000+ minimum project size and multiple verified review engagements in the $10,000 to $49,999 band. Those figures are directory/review-based benchmarks, not a rate card published by Operatix, so buyers should treat them as evidence of entry point and common deal size rather than universal list pricing.

Sources (7)

Where this pricing information was traced from.