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Price Setting: What Would Your Right
Price Be if You Knew You Could Not Fail?
How under-pricing keeps just-right customers away
by Molly Gordon, MCC
"I work with people in the area of self-development
and life improvement and [when I think about the
right price for it] I feel like I should be doing it for free.
I have been a successful and very well paid Graphic Designer and have
no problem taking money from Corporations but when it comes to individuals
and their hard earned money... boy, that's a different story. I
am working on this and I know it comes down to how I value myself
and what I have to teach." --Noni Boon, Interbeing
Yes, how you value yourself and what you have
to offer has a lot to do with price setting.
But there is another piece: how you value your customers and their
ability to decide for themselves what they need to learn and how much
they want to pay for it.
You see, underpricing and undervaluing your work
devalues your customers (clients, patrons, etc.). It suggests
that they need something (your help) that they cannot afford. Under the
guise of care of compassion, under-pricing sets up a co-dependent and
manipulative relationship with people you haven't even met and who (if
they are not in a position to afford and apply your work) are not in the
market for what you are selling.
Imagine having a conversation with someone about
your work in which you:
- Are aware of how much you like your chosen work;
- Feel free to talk about what you do from the perspective of what
excites you (not from the perspective of persuading someone to buy
it);
- Are completely comfortable talking about fees and other charges
because what you charge provides you with the "energy inputs" you
need to deliver your best work;
- Have such profound respect for the other person that it never occurs
to you that they "need" what you offer or that they have expectations
of you that they are not able to express for themselves;
- Love that your job is to do what you do and take care of you;
- Love that their job is to do what they do and take care of themselves;
- Ask them to buy as naturally as if you are inviting them to a party
because you can see it's such a good fit.
Robert Schuller asked, "What would you do if you knew
you could not fail?"
I'm asking you, "What would you charge if you
knew you could not fail?" Readers, notice where that question
takes you. To grandiose fantasies of sky-high rates? To indignant defense
of the right of the poor to enjoy your services? Or?? And then ask yourself
why, knowing you could not fail, you would charge anything but the
right price or fee?
A good deal of knowing and charging the
right price comes down to distinguishing among what Byron Katie
calls the three kinds of business:
- my business
- your business
- Reality's business (also known as God's business)
It is easy to tell if you are in your business because
you feel grounded, whole, and peaceful.
When you are in someone else's business, you
feel isolated, hurt, defensive, afraid (but, to use a Katie-ism,
only 100 percent of the time).
Any time you are in someone else's business, you are
trying to manage their reality. In the best-case scenario, this leads
codependence. In the worst, it leads to war. Most often, it creates an
awkward, unbridgeable gap between you and your just-right customers.
When you base your price
setting, selling strategies (or lack thereof), or behavior on what
you think others think of you, you are in their business. Even
if they appear to have invited you to be there, if you hold them to be
whole, capable, and competent adults, the appropriate response is to graciously
decline and stay in your own business, the business of noticing how much
you need to charge to do good work with the people for whom that work
(at that price) is a blessing.
Talk Back: love to hear from you, and
I read every letter personally. Send your thoughts to letters@authenticpromotion.com.
And be sure to let me know if you prefer not to be quoted.
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Learn
more about Authentic Promotion - a comprehensive small
business marketing resource that turns marketing and self promotion into
a path of increasing self-awareness, authenticity, and right livelihood.
In particular, the pricing strategies
you learn to apply will build the solid foundation for your authentic
prosperity as an entrepreneur.
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Contact an acknowledged expert
on small business marketing Molly Gordon at:
Shaboom Inc. Life could be a dream…
PO Box 195
Suquamish, WA 98392-0195
mgordon@authenticpromotion.com
As a business coach and small
business marketing consultant, Molly Gordon, MCC, is available in Greater
Seattle Area and internationally |
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