Why Clients Don't Care About Your Costs
In communicating a price increase to clients, one common error is to reference your increased costs as a rationale for the price increase.
That’s a mistake. A big one.
It's not a mistake because it's not true. Clients intuitively know your costs are rising because theirs are, too.
Attributing a price increase to higher expenses is pointless, even with the clients you think will follow you to Hades and back. Sure, your best-fit clients want you to succeed. They support you in any number of ways, often by sending you referrals. When a client refers their valued relationships to you, they are essentially lending the trust others have in them to you. That’s powerful.
But just because there’s a lot they’ll put on the line for you to help you in your business doesn’t mean that they care about everything you have to deal with.
They can’t care about what they don’t know or understand, and one of those things is your costs to operate.
Clients don’t have vision into everything that goes into how you produce your product or service. Even a solopreneur has multiple inputs to their business that clients cannot possibly know.
Clients are like cats. They love you, but only to a certain point. After that point, it's about them.
Clients Care About Value
Every organization must earn a profit over time in order to survive. It's not just true for you, it's a fundamental aspect of every business. Even a non-profit organization must, over time, have more resources coming in, whether from donations, grants, or other receipts, than money going out.
It’s true for individuals, when you think about it. Every person, and certainly every one of your clients, has their own “income statement,” you might say, which looks something like this:
The value a client perceives is not just tangible but intangible. It's not just the service itself, but what they are able to do because of the outcome of the service.
If you provide consulting services to a business, the business owner most certainly cares about the expense reduction, revenue enhancement, or some other metric in the business that will move in a favorable direction because of the work you're doing.
What they also covet, however, are other intangibles that come with the assignment you successfully complete. Examples of those intangibles could be:
Regardless of the service or product, all clients must perceive a "value profit" in the transaction or they won't buy.
The Relationship Between Cost, Price, and Value in Every Transaction
In my book, The Generosity Mindset, I have a table that illustrates how your client's "income statement" lines up with the income statement of your business:
The only point of convergence is price. The price the client pays is the price you receive. It's the only figure that both you and the client have perfect vision of.
Your costs have no relation to what the client has a natural, understandable self interest to be concerned about: the value of what they receive.
Your Quest is to Understand Perceived Value
Clients seek solutions to their problems and needs. They purchase services and products they believe will help them achieve their goals and aspirations. They aren't concerned with details they can't fully understand, such as your costs, that lie between their current issues and the solution they desire, and rightly so.
Your service is a means to an end—a solution. This fundamental truth has always been, and will continue to be, valid as long as people exchange money for products and services.
Understanding and embracing this basic aspect of human behavior will enhance your ability to define the perceived value your clients place on the outcomes of your services. Consequently, you will be better equipped not only to cover your costs but also to address your clients' deepest needs so that you can command premium pricing.
#risingcosts #value #pricing #professionalservices #pricevaluejourney
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Business consultant and coach, author, and podcaster John Ray advises solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their two most frustrating problems: pricing and business development. John is passionate about how changes in mindset, positioning, and pricing change the trajectory of a business and the lifestyle choices of a business owner. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.
John is the author of the national bestselling book, The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices . The book covers topics like value and adopting a mindset of value, pricing your services more effectively, proposals, and essential elements of growing your business. The book is available at all major physical and online book retailers .
Founder and CEO @ The Profitability Coach | Profitability You Never Thought Possible | Exit Planning for Boomer and Gen X business owners
5 个月Another excellent article, John! Clients just want their problems solved. I echo Paul A. Zanardo's comments.
Finance:Management Accounting:Product Costing
5 个月Every time I read about value based pricing, the more I get confidence in negotiating prices. Thanks @John Ray and @ Mark Stiving
I help investors convince their portfolio companies to raise prices ... more | Founder @ Impact Pricing | Author, Speaker, Pricing Expert
5 个月John, I rarely disagree with you, but I have to on this one. First, I absolutely agree with your final point that buyers buy based on value. The value they receive must be larger than the price, usually significantly larger. And cost isn't even part of that decision. So we agree on the most important point. The part I disagree with is that costs don't matter. Although costs don't matter to how much value a buyer receives, buyers are not perfectly rational and they use emotions as part of their decision process. (I wish they didn't.) Hence, there are some tactics that can be used when increasing prices that appeal to the irrational or emotional part of the decision. One of those is "our costs went up." Another is, "you still pay less than new customers." Another is, "We value your loyalty, so we will maintain your old price for another 90 days." None of these have to do with Value, but they all make the buyer feel better when we tell them we are raising their price. I make all three of these, if true, part of every price increase communication. But to your main point, we must emphasize value!
Practical AI for Your Business | Keynote Speaker | Workshop Leader | Future of Work | Coined Career Agility | Spidey Sense for Emerging Trends | Agility Analyst | Author
5 个月"The difference is your profit." I like your diagram John Ray. Inherent in your illustration is the emphasis on value AND the importance of managing your business well.
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5 个月I don't have much to add here except everything you've mentioned helped my company successfully increase our pricing through the practices discussed in The Generosity Mindset, John!