Repurpose workspace
Ep 62 — The Pricing Episode: Why You're Charging Half What You Should
Source transcript
highlights markedYou've rebuilt pricing for, what, sixty-odd SaaS companies at Halver. Where do founders break it first?
Three years ago a client rejected an eight-thousand-dollar proposal from a consultant I know. Same week, a competitor charged them forty thousand for less scope — and they signed. That's the whole lesson: price is a signal before it's a number. Buyers read it as a statement about what working with you means.
The $40k invoice story. Every founder listening just felt that one.
Underpricing reads as risk. To a serious buyer, a low number doesn't say bargain — it says unproven, unsupported, about to disappear.
So a prospect comes back and says: can you sharpen your pencil? What's the move?
Move scope, never price. Pull onboarding, pull seats, pull limits — the unit price holds. Every discount you give with no scope change teaches the market your list price was fiction. They'll wait you out forever after that.
Move scope, never price. That's a tattoo.
To a procurement team, cheap means risky. Enterprise buyers have budgets to spend and careers to protect — a suspiciously low number makes them ask what's missing, not where to sign.
Before you quote anything, run the two-question audit. One: what does this problem cost them per quarter? Two: who signs off, and what does that person get judged on? If you can't answer both, you're not pricing — you're guessing.
Two questions. Most founders can't answer either. Maya, this was a masterclass — where do people find you?
The $40k invoice that changed how I price
Discounting is lying about your value
5 pricing mistakes I see in every founder P&L