Day 351 – Assigning a Price to Value

We spent a good part of today in a long conversation about pricing. The question kept circling back to the same root. How valuable is the thing we are providing. Before you can ask for a price, you have to understand the realized value. That is true for software and startups. It is also true for you and your work. If you want to be paid more, you need to know your value proposition. You need to say it in clear and simple terms.

Value is slippery when you keep it abstract. So we tried to make it practical. We drew a box on the whiteboard and listed four ways value shows up. You do not need all four every time, but you do need at least one. Increase revenue. Reduce cost. Reduce risk. Reduce time. If you cannot point to one of those levers with clarity, your product is fragile and your pitch is noise. The same applies to your next compensation conversation. If you cannot connect what you do to one of those levers, you have not earned the ask.

Revenue first. If you help someone sell more, convert more, or protect price, then your work spills directly into the top line. This is why a great salesperson is paid well. They move the needle in a way that everyone can see. It is simple to say and hard to do. That is where value lives.

Cost second. The smaller the spend to get the work done, the more the margin breathes. Early in my career I asked for a chance to teach a more advanced class. The owner did not see the reason to switch instructors. I offered the same outcome for half the price. He hired me the next day. I was not cheaper for the sake of being cheap. I delivered the same result at a lower cost. That is value.

Risk third. Defects, compliance exposure, downtime, and all the little traps that do not make the front page will drain a company slowly. People spend to avoid that pain. Look at how many buyers choose a car for its safety features. Safety sells because risk is real. Help someone lower the chance of the bad thing and you become part of their decision every time.

Time fourth. Cash flow loves speed. If you shorten the distance between effort and dollars, you earn attention. Right now we are building software at a fast pace. If someone could help us finish sooner without sacrificing quality, I would listen. Reduce cycle time. Reach the market sooner. Convert to cash quicker. That lever alone can justify the purchase.

These four levers clarify more than pricing. They give you a way to turn a fuzzy idea into something that can stand on its own. Value is not declared. Value is built. A decent idea executed well beats a hundred that never leave the notebook. We forget that. We argue about concepts while someone else ships, learns, and improves. The building is where the value appears.

So here is the personal challenge. Before you ask for a raise, or attempt to price your product, fill in one sentence for each lever.

I increase revenue by ________.

I reduce cost by ________.

I reduce risk by ________.

I reduce time by ________.

If you struggle to write a clear sentence for even one of those, then the work starts there. Return to the whiteboard. Get closer to the customer. Trim the features that do not move a lever. Build the piece that does. Do that consistently, and the price conversation gets easier. The value is no longer elusive. It is visible.

In the end, this is what I want to teach my kids. Make yourself valuable by the way you build, by the way you carry the load, and by the clarity with which you help others move forward. Increase revenue. Reduce cost. Reduce risk. Reduce time. Master one lever. Then a second. The price will follow.

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