Polsia lists ClipForge pricing tiers
- Polsia posted ClipForge pricing on May 24, offering local businesses 12 short videos a month for $750 or 20 for $1,500. - The offer targets restaurants, realtors, gyms and barbers that “can’t make it themselves,” framing outsourced short-form as a low-cost recurring service. - The pricing was published in a Polsia social post, alongside earlier posts describing local-business clipping as a repeatable agency model.
Polsia used a May 24 social post to put clear price points on a short-form video offer aimed at small local businesses: 12 videos a month for $750, or 20 videos for $1,500. The package, branded ClipForge, was pitched to restaurants, realtors, gyms and barbers that need steady social output but do not produce content in-house. The post presents short-form editing as a standardized service rather than a custom agency engagement. Those numbers matter because they give a rare public look at how one operator is trying to sell volume-based video production to local merchants. Instead of leading with strategy retainers or campaign fees, the offer is framed around a monthly output count and a fixed price. In a separate recent post, Polsia said “every local business needs short-form video” and described that gap as the business opportunity, linking ClipForge to a broader local-service prospecting model. ### How cheap is this on a per-video basis? The $750 tier works out to $62.50 per video, while the $1,500 tier comes to $75 per video. That makes the lower-priced package the cheaper option on a unit basis, even though the higher tier promises more monthly volume. Those figures suggest the offer is built to clear a low entry point for small businesses that want regular posting without hiring an in-house editor. The target list in Polsia’s post — restaurants, realtors, gyms and barbers — points to categories that often need constant visual updates, promotions and personality-driven content but may not have dedicated content staff. (polsia.com) ### Why aim this at local service businesses? Local service businesses are a natural fit for short-form because they have repeatable visual material: haircuts, workouts, listings, dishes, before-and-after shots and staff appearances. The ClipForge pitch appears to assume that the bottleneck is not whether these businesses have anything to film, but whether they can turn raw footage into a steady stream of posts. That logic matches broader marketing commentary around short-form video. HubSpot said in an April 2026 post that short-form video remains the top-performing content format for marketers, while Thryv has framed it as a way for local brands to build visibility and trust in crowded markets. ### What does this say about the service being sold? ClipForge is being sold less as bespoke creative work and more as production infrastructure. The offer is defined by monthly output, not by platform strategy, ad buying or brand consulting. That is consistent with a market in which AI tools and templated editing workflows have lowered the cost of producing large numbers of short clips. James Camp, in a separate social post cited in the source briefing, argued that AI tools are cutting video production costs and enabling agencies to produce far more content with faster turnaround. (blog.hubspot.com) Polsia’s pricing sits in that same lane: a standardized package for businesses that need frequency more than custom campaign development. ### Why publish the pricing publicly? Public pricing reduces friction in a category where many agencies still ask prospects to book a call before seeing a rate card. By posting exact monthly prices, Polsia makes the offer legible to small operators that may be comparing freelance editors, social media managers and DIY tools. The May 24 post also follows an earlier Polsia message about a “ClipLaunch” agency model for local businesses, suggesting the company is testing repeatable, productized services around short-form content. That gives prospects a concrete number to react to immediately: $750 to start, or $1,500 for heavier output. ### What comes next for buyers considering an offer like this? The next question for any local business will be delivery: who films, how revisions work, which platforms are included and how quickly clips are turned around. Polsia’s public post establishes the headline rates, but buyers would still need operating details before signing. For now, the clearest next step is the source post itself, where the ClipForge tiers were published on May 24 and tied to the named target categories of restaurants, realtors, gyms and barbers.