Agent skill

pricing-strategy

Price a product or service for a solopreneur business. Use when deciding how much to charge, choosing between pricing models, structuring tiers, handling price objections, and adjusting prices over time. Covers value-based pricing, competitor benchmarking, psychological pricing tactics, pricing tiers design, and price testing. Trigger on "how should I price this", "pricing strategy", "what should I charge", "pricing tiers", "am I undercharging", "pricing model", "how to price my product", "raise my prices".

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SKILL.md

Pricing Strategy

Overview

Pricing is the fastest lever to pull on revenue — and the one solopreneurs get wrong most often, almost always by undercharging. This playbook walks you from first principles (what is the value actually worth?) through to a concrete pricing structure you can ship, test, and iterate on.


Step 1: Anchor to Value, Not Cost

The most common solopreneur pricing mistake: calculating how long something takes to build, dividing by an hourly rate, and charging that. This is cost-plus pricing. It caps your income at your hours and ignores what the customer actually gains.

Value-based pricing starts from the other direction: What is the outcome worth to the customer?

Value calculation framework:

  1. Identify the measurable outcome your product delivers (e.g., "saves 5 hours/week", "increases conversion by 15%", "reduces churn by 20%")
  2. Quantify that outcome in dollars for your target customer (e.g., "5 hours/week × $75/hr billable rate × 50 weeks = $18,750/year saved")
  3. Price as a fraction of that value. Industry norms: 10-30% of value delivered is a healthy range. Charging less than 10% signals low confidence. Charging more than 30% requires exceptional proof.

Example: If your tool saves a freelancer $18,750/year, pricing at $150/month ($1,800/year) = 9.6% of value. Reasonable. Pricing at $500/month ($6,000/year) = 32% of value. Aggressive but possible with strong proof.


Step 2: Benchmark Against Competitors

Value-based pricing gives you a ceiling. Competitor pricing gives you market context.

  • Collect pricing from your top 3-5 competitors (from your competitive analysis).
  • Map their price points across tiers.
  • Identify the price ranges: where does the market cluster? Where are the gaps?

Positioning rules:

  • Price ABOVE market average if your product delivers more value, is easier to use, or has better support. Justify it clearly.
  • Price AT market average if you're entering a mature market and need to earn trust first. Differentiate on value, not price.
  • Price BELOW market average only if you have a structural cost advantage or are using a freemium model where the free tier is the acquisition channel. Do not race to the bottom out of insecurity.

Step 3: Choose a Pricing Model

The model matters as much as the number. Pick the one that aligns with how your customers think about value.

Model How It Works Best For
Flat-rate One price, everything included Simple products. Customers hate surprises. Easy to budget.
Per-user / Per-seat Price scales with team size B2B tools where usage grows with team. Natural expansion revenue.
Usage-based Price scales with consumption (API calls, storage, transactions) Infrastructure, APIs, high-variance usage products.
Tiered (good/better/best) 3 tiers with increasing features and price Most SaaS products. Anchoring and upsell built in.
Freemium Free tier + paid upgrades Products where usage is the best marketing. Requires viral or sticky product.
One-time purchase Pay once, own forever Digital products, templates, tools with no ongoing hosting cost.
Retainer / Monthly service Fixed monthly fee for ongoing work Consulting, agency, managed services. Predictable revenue.
Hybrid Combination (e.g., flat base + usage overage) When base value is fixed but usage can spike.

Solopreneur recommendation: Start with flat-rate or tiered. These are simplest to communicate, easiest to predict revenue from, and lowest friction at checkout.


Step 4: Design Your Pricing Tiers (If Tiered)

Three tiers is the sweet spot. More than three confuses. Fewer than two leaves money on the table.

Tier design principles:

Tier 1 (Entry): The lowest price that's sustainable. Serves customers with the smallest need or budget. Should cover your marginal cost of serving them.

Tier 2 (Core): This is where you want most customers to land. Price it so the value jump from Tier 1 is obvious and worth it. This tier should cover the majority of your revenue.

Tier 3 (Premium): For customers with the biggest needs. Include features that only power users need. This tier also serves as a price anchor — it makes Tier 2 feel like a great deal by comparison.

Anchoring rule: Put Tier 3 first on your pricing page. Humans anchor to the first number they see. Seeing a high number first makes the middle tier feel reasonable.

Feature distribution:

  • Tier 1: Core functionality only. Enough to deliver value, limited enough to create upgrade incentive.
  • Tier 2: Core + the features that most customers actually want.
  • Tier 3: Everything + power features, priority support, advanced analytics, or white-labeling.

Step 5: Price Psychologically

Small pricing decisions compound. Apply these where appropriate:

  • End in 9: $49 feels less than $50. $99 feels less than $100. This works.
  • Annual discount: Offer 20-30% off for annual payment. This locks in revenue, improves cash flow, and reduces churn. Frame it as "Save $X/year" not "20% off."
  • Per-day framing: "$0.99/day" sounds less than "$29/month" even though they're the same. Use this in marketing copy, not on the pricing page (that feels deceptive).
  • Free trial over freemium (for B2B): A 14-day free trial of the full product often converts better than a limited free tier. The customer experiences the full value before deciding.
  • Social proof next to price: A customer count, a rating, or a quote right beside the price reduces purchase anxiety.

Step 6: Price Test and Iterate

Your first price is a hypothesis. Test it.

Testing approach:

  1. Launch with your planned pricing.
  2. Track two metrics for the first 30 days: conversion rate (visitors → paying customers) and churn rate (paying → cancelling).
  3. Interpret:
    • Conversion too low (< 2% for SaaS) → Price may be too high, OR the value isn't communicated clearly enough. Test both.
    • Churn too high (> 5%/month) → Product isn't delivering on its price promise. Fix the product or lower the price.
    • Both conversion and retention are strong → You may be underpriced. Test a 20-30% increase on new customers.

Price increase playbook (when ready to raise):

  • Never raise prices on existing customers without 30+ days notice.
  • Grandfather existing customers at their current rate for 6-12 months.
  • Frame increases as "we're adding more value" not "we're charging more."
  • Raise prices on new customers first. See if conversion holds. If it does, the market supports the new price.

Pricing Mistakes to Avoid

  • Undercharging because you feel guilty or insecure. You are solving a real problem. Charge for it.
  • Pricing based on what YOU would pay, not what your TARGET CUSTOMER would pay. Different people, different budgets.
  • Never testing or changing prices. Pricing should be revisited quarterly minimum.
  • Offering too many tiers or add-ons. Complexity kills conversion. Keep it simple.
  • Discounting heavily at launch to get early customers. It trains customers to expect low prices and devalues your product. Offer a limited-time launch price instead, with a clear end date.

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