Pricing is the scariest word in business. Not because the maths is hard. Because the conversation with yourself is.
When you set a price, you are not just costing a product or service. You are declaring what you believe your work is worth in the market.
For founders especially, that number feels deeply personal. The business is an extension of you. Raise the price and you are saying “I am worth this.” That is a vulnerable sentence to put in writing on a proposal.
This is why founders who can confidently quote their team’s day rate often freeze when they are quoting their own. The skill is identical. The emotional weight is not.
Every other part of a sale can be reframed. A buyer who does not book a meeting was “too busy.” A buyer who did not reply was “in a different headspace.” But a buyer who pushes back on your price has issued a verdict, and it feels personal.
The brain reads “your price is too high” as “you are too expensive,” which gets translated very quickly into “you are not worth it.”
This is why most discount conversations are not really about the discount. They are about avoiding the verdict in the first place. Drop the price pre-emptively and you never have to hear it.
Cost of goods is maths. Marketing budgets follow benchmarks. Hiring has market rates. Pricing has none of that.
The right price depends on positioning, perceived value, competitive context, buyer psychology, and willingness to pay. Most of those are subjective. Most leaders do not have the data to be confident. So they default to what feels safe, which is usually too low.
Most operational mistakes are recoverable. A bad hire can be unwound. A failed campaign can be paused. A botched launch can be relaunched. But a pricing mistake feels like it puts revenue itself at risk.
That asymmetric fear — lose the deal vs lose some margin — almost always pushes leaders downward. The deal feels concrete and immediate. The margin loss feels abstract and distant.
Sales is taught. Marketing is taught. Operations is taught. Pricing? Almost never.
Leaders inherit pricing instincts from their first job, their gut feel, or whatever the competition was charging when they launched. Then they iterate from there, usually downward. When something is not taught, it gets treated as a black box. And black boxes are scary by default.
Pricing stops being scary when you separate three things most people fuse together.
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The price is not you. It is a commercial decision, not a verdict on your worth. The moment you decouple your identity from the number, the fear loosens. Buyers push back on prices every day. It says nothing about the person behind the price.
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The price is a hypothesis, not a permanent statement. You are allowed to test it. Raise it for a quarter and watch what happens. Pricing is iterative, not engraved. Bain’s research shows 85% of B2B leaders say their pricing needs improvement. Only 13% have effective tools to actually change it.
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The price needs an answer to one question: what does it cost the buyer NOT to buy? If you can articulate that clearly, the price stops feeling expensive. It starts feeling like a bargain.
Pricing feels scary because it sits at the meeting point of how I value myself, whether the market values me, and whether I can defend that value out loud.
The leaders who get past this are not the most confident or the most credentialled. They are the ones who have separated the price from the personal.
Want to talk about how to price your offer with confidence?


