Today's Posts Follow Us On Twitter! TFL Members on Twitter  
Forum search: Advanced Search  
Navigation
Marketplace
  Members Login:
Lost password?
  Forum Statistics:
Forum Members: 24,254
Total Threads: 80,792
Total Posts: 566,472
There are 1668 users currently browsing (tf).
 
  Our Partners:
 
  TalkFreelance     Business and Website Management     Articles From The Experts :

How To Set Your "Right" Price

Thread title: How To Set Your "Right" Price
Closed Thread    
    Thread tools Search this thread Display Modes  
10-08-2006, 11:01 PM
#1
melanies is offline melanies
Status: I'm new around here
Join date: Aug 2006
Location:
Expertise:
Software:
 
Posts: 3
iTrader: 0 / 0%
 

melanies is on a distinguished road

  Old  How To Set Your "Right" Price

How do you set the right price for your products and services? The "right" price is the price you are happy with and the price which clients are willing to pay.

My suggestion is to put your pricing through the "Right Price Test." This test involves asking 2 questions:

1. Are you happy with your price?
2. Are clients willing to pay your price?

You need a "yes" to both these questions for it to be the "right" price.

Are You Happy With Your Price?

Just suppose you were able to get as many clients as you wanted at $x, ask yourself:

- Would you be happy?
- Is $x a fair exchange for the value clients will receive?
- Will you resent or appreciate your clients at this price?
- Will you be inspired to go the "extra mile" in service at this price?
- Would you attract your ideal client at that price?

Suppose you charge $50 an hour and the standard is $200 an hour. Imagine that you ended up being booked solid working 8 hours a day at $50 an hour. Would you, at the end of several full weeks in a row, be happy that you were only charging $50 an hour? Is $50 an hour a fair exchange of value? Will you be resenting or appreciating these $50 an hour clients? Would you be feeling like going the "extra" mile in service? Do you think you would be attracting your "ideal" client at this price?

To work out your own "right" price, that you are happy with, assume that there is an abundance of clients for you. Now pick a price for one of your products or services and ask yourself the same set of questions. Keep changing the price until you get a "yes" to all the questions. You will need to do some work to determine the value you deliver before you will be able to answer the "fair exchange of value" question.

Now you're probably saying this is great in theory but even if there was an abundance of clients, would clients pay my price? That question is the second question in the "Right Price" test.

Are Clients Willing To Pay Your Price?

Part of working out if you are happy with your price was to work out all the value you achieve for your clients. The value and the results need to far outweigh the price you are asking people to pay. This is a fair exchange of value.

If I asked you to give me $1 and in exchange I would give you something worth $1000 would you give me $1? You would, provided you wanted $1000 and you believed me.

So the answer to the question "Are clients willing to pay your price?" is "yes" provided:

- they are qualified (have a need/want, money, etc.)
- you know that the value clients receive outweighs the price and you can articulate this
- potential clients can clearly understand that the value far outweighs the price
- potential clients believe you can deliver the value.

I encourage you to put all your pricing through the "Right Price Test." The rewards will then follow for both yourself and your clients.

(c) Tessa Stowe, Sales Conversation, 2006. You are welcome to "reprint" this article online as long as it remains complete and unaltered (including the "about the author" info at the end).

Tessa Stowe teaches coaches, service professionals and recovering salespeople 10 simple steps to turn conversations into clients without being sales-y or pushy. Her FREE monthly Sales Conversation newsletter is full of tips on how to sell your services by just being yourself. Sign up now at http://www.salesconversation.com

10-08-2006, 11:43 PM
#2
Bas is offline Bas
Status: I love this place
Join date: Jan 2005
Location: The Netherlands
Expertise: Frontend, vBulletin
Software: Coda, Photoshop
 
Posts: 607
iTrader: -1 / 0%
 

Bas is on a distinguished road

Send a message via MSN to Bas

  Old

Great article. I've actually asked myself the first question a few times and I have raised my prices twice for the same service in 1 year.
The thing with the second question is, though; that some clients don't understand the value of what they're getting. It's usually best not to deal with those clients because they are usually the ones asking for extra service.

10-10-2006, 08:19 PM
#3
BrokenFaith is offline BrokenFaith
BrokenFaith's Avatar
Status: Creatistic
Join date: Jul 2006
Location: Arizona
Expertise:
Software:
 
Posts: 1,726
iTrader: 5 / 100%
 

BrokenFaith is on a distinguished road

Send a message via AIM to BrokenFaith Send a message via MSN to BrokenFaith

  Old

This helped me a lot, I am soon planning on doing something, and I needed the right price, this helped me amazingly figure out how much to charge.

10-12-2006, 04:14 AM
#4
Julian is offline Julian
Status: Simply to simplify
Join date: Apr 2005
Location: Foxton, Manawatu, New Zealand
Expertise:
Software:
 
Posts: 5,572
iTrader: 0 / 0%
 

Julian is on a distinguished road

  Old

Good article, thanks!

Closed Thread    


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

  Posting Rules  
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump:
 
  Contains New Posts Forum Contains New Posts   Contains No New Posts Forum Contains No New Posts   A Closed Forum Forum is Closed