Calculate Your
alfred_ ROI
Enter your hourly rate and estimated hours lost to email coordination. See exactly what alfred_ is worth to you.
alfred_ pays for itself in 7 minutes of your time.
Cost: $24.99/month ($299.88/year) · Net annual value: $155,700
Where the Saved Time Comes From
Cost Comparison
| Option | Monthly Cost | Annual Cost | Your ROI |
|---|---|---|---|
| alfred_ | $24.99 | $539.88 | 520x |
| Virtual Assistant | $2,000+ | $24,000+ | 7x |
| Full-Time EA | $5,000+ | $60,000+ | 3x |
| Do Nothing | $0 | $0 | -$156,000 lost |
Start Recovering $3,000/Week
Setup takes 2 minutes. alfred_ starts processing your inbox tonight. Full refund if it doesn't return multiples of what you paid.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you calculate hours saved?
Based on reported time savings from professionals who use AI email triage, automated drafting, and task extraction. The average professional spends 3-4 hours/day on email coordination. alfred_ reduces this to 15-20 minutes by handling triage, drafts, and task extraction overnight.
Is the ROI calculation realistic?
The calculation shows recovered capacity, meaning hours you could redirect to billable work, deal-making, or strategic thinking. Whether you actually bill those hours depends on your demand and schedule. Most professionals report that recovered time goes directly to revenue-generating activities.
What if I save fewer hours than estimated?
Even at half the estimated savings, alfred_ delivers significant ROI. At $200/hour and just 5 hours saved per week, that's $4,000/month in recovered capacity vs. $24.99/month for alfred_. The math works at almost any usage level.
How does alfred_ actually save this time?
Email triage (5-8 hrs/week saved), AI draft replies (3-5 hrs), automatic task extraction (2-3 hrs), calendar intelligence and meeting prep (2-3 hrs), and follow-up tracking (1-2 hrs). alfred_ handles these overnight while you sleep.
What if alfred_ doesn't deliver this ROI?
Full refund. The decision to keep alfred_ should be obvious, not hopeful. If it doesn't return multiples of what you paid, you get your money back.