Codeable vs Your Own Pro Services
Referring customers to Codeable feels like a premium move. Look closely at the economics and the host is paying for the privilege of giving its revenue away.
Codeable has a good marketplace platform and some serious WordPress freelancers. Its developers are genuinely vetted (we’ve met some of them at WordCamps), the quality is more consistent than an open gig marketplace, and customers usually get competent WordPress help. We’ll give it that up front, because the problem with Codeable for a host has nothing to do with whether the work is good.
The problem is what the arrangement does to your business. Here’s the pattern we see again and again: a host doesn’t have a services team, so when customers need WordPress work, the host refers them to Codeable — and, to sweeten it, the host hands the customer a $50–$100 credit to spend there. The host feels generous and helpful. What’s actually happening is that the host is paying money to send its own revenue, its own customer relationship, and its own brand moment to a third party — and never really seeing a single thing that happens next.
It’s the rare own-goal that costs you twice: once in the credit you fund, and again in the revenue you forfeit.
The two models, stated plainly
A Codeable referral means you send the customer to Codeable’s platform — often with a credit you paid for — and a Codeable-assigned developer does the work. Codeable books the revenue, owns the transaction, and controls the relationship. You get a goodbye and a smaller bank balance.
A white-label pro services partner means the customer never leaves your brand. You sell the service, a vetted WordPress team delivers it behind your name, and you book the revenue. No credit to fund, no relationship to surrender, no blind spot. With proservices.net, you only pay after you collect (clean revenue-share model, no hidden fees or upfront costs).
Both get the customer competent help. Only one of them is a business decision that works in your favor.
Codeable vs proservices.net
| What Matters | Seahawk proservices.net | Codeable |
|---|---|---|
| Who books the revenue | You do — your sale, your margin | Codeable does — you get nothing |
| The credit math | You earn on every job | You pay a $50–$100 credit to send the job away |
| Net effect on the host | Revenue in | Money out, revenue forfeited |
| The customer relationship | Stays with you, under your brand | Handed to Codeable, may never return to you |
| Brand experience | White-label — your name throughout | Customer experiences Codeable, not you |
| Quality | Vetted WordPress specialists, proven SOPs | Genuinely vetted (its real strength) |
| Visibility | You see the work and learn the demand | Zero — you never know what happened |
| Continuity | Same team, building on prior context | Project-by-project, outside your walls |
| Pricing control | You set retail and keep the spread | Codeable sets pricing; you set nothing |
| Recurring upside | Care plans, repeat work, expansion | One-off, all of it captured by Codeable |
| What you learn | What your base needs, where to grow | Nothing — it’s a black box |
| Strategic position | You become indispensable | You become a referral source for a competitor |
Where the real differences live
You pay to give your revenue away. This is the part that genuinely stings once you see it. The host funds a $50–$100 credit and forfeits the revenue on the job itself. So a customer who might have spent $800 with you instead spends it on Codeable — partly on your dime. You’ve converted a revenue opportunity into a cost and lose out on recurring WP Care upsells. Run that across a year of referrals and it’s a quietly significant number flowing out of your business to make a third party’s numbers look good. With a pro services partner, that same $800 is your sale at your price, and you keep the margin instead of subsidizing someone else’s.
The marketplace books the revenue, not you. Codeable’s quality is real, but every dollar of it lands on Codeable’s books. You were the trusted relationship that surfaced the need — the reason the work happened at all — and your share is zero. Worse than zero, once you count the credit. Being good at sending business to someone else is not a business model; it’s a leak.
You send the customer outside your ecosystem. The moment a customer lands on Codeable, they’ve learned where WordPress problems get solved, and it isn’t you. The relationship that should deepen every time you help them instead gets routed to a platform whose interest is in keeping that customer. You’re training your own base to look past you.
You never know what you’re going to get — or what you got. Even with Codeable’s vetting, you have no visibility. You don’t see the scope, the work, the outcome, or whether the customer was thrilled or burned. You’re flying blind on your own customer’s most important asset, learning nothing about what your base needs or how to grow with them. A white-label partner keeps the work inside your line of sight, so every project teaches you something about where the next dollar is.
There’s little real upside for the host. Strip it to the studs and a Codeable referral, credit and all, is a cost center disguised as a courtesy. No margin, no recurring hook, no retention lift, no data, no brand equity — and an actual cash outlay on top. It is hard to design a worse trade for a host that already owns the customer relationship.
When Codeable makes sense
Honestly? For an end customer with no trusted provider and a complex one-off development need, Codeable is a solid place to land. But you are not that customer. You are the host — the provider they already trust. Handing that trust (and a credit) to Codeable isn’t serving the customer better; it’s surrendering the exact advantage you spent years building.
The bottom line
Referring to Codeable feels premium and generous. The economics tell a different story: you pay a credit, you forfeit the revenue, you give away the relationship, and you never see what happened. That’s paying to lose.
The work your customers need is going to get done regardless. The only decision is whether it builds your business or Codeable’s. With proservices.net, the WordPress help your customers already want becomes your revenue, your relationship, and your brand — vetted delivery behind your name, with no credit to fund and no black box.
Stop paying to send your customers away. Run your numbers on the Pro Services ROI Calculator.


