4 Steps to Setting the Value of Your Services (Part 2 of 3)

Continued from part 1. 

3. Value Results-Oriented PricingBusNotesPt2

I met with a CEO of a small business that requires lots of traveling to disseminate its products. The team is well liked by all clients, but the traveling process makes the business inefficient. This drops the overall value of the product and delivery services. It also means, unbeknownst to the CEO, that clients are looking for alternative solutions.

My package offer to fix the looming problem was designed to increase revenue 300% by implementing online ordering. The new process guaranteed that the parts and services happened “just in time” rather than by chance. It also allowed for territory expansion without adding more personnel or trucks.

The package was priced at $120 per hour for my time to set up the online services, train the employees, and structure the new distribution practices using a third-party shipping company. Plus, they wouldn’t owe anything if I didn’t double the company’s revenue in 12 months. In other words, if I only hit 99.9% of the financial goal, they’d get everything I did for free.

The CEO turned me down because he never paid anyone more than $29 per hour. Since our last meeting, the business has seen a 12% reduction in revenue because clients have found alternative sources for the product. While this situation was an odd bird, there are plenty of companies that would love to work with a vendor that guarantees his work. The real value of any workload is in the end results.

4. Establish a Formula for Service Pricing

When I worked for the network division at Lucent Technologies, our competition was running circles around us. After loosing two dozen bids in a row, upper management demanded something be done about it. I researched the situation and learned that it took our team 7 days to publish a quote, and our competitors did it in 3-4 days.

After discussing the issue with the team, we came up with an online quoting system that returned accurate quotes within 4 hours. No one ever questioned why we were inundated with orders. Upper management just smiled all day long.

An entrepreneur that I met with last week had a similar problem. She didn’t have enough time each day to put quotes together and lost most jobs before she could finish her quotes. By turning to a modular formula system, she can now turn some quotes around while she’s still on the phone.

End of part 2 of 3. Part 3 will provide a pricing sample.

© 2017 by CJ Powers

4 Steps to Setting the Value of Your Services (Part 1 of 3)

BusNotesPt1

My Denver omelet was tastier than normal and I wondered what happened in the kitchen that made it more flavorful. Its value went up and the menu’s price tag no longer mattered. I took another mouth-watering bite and looked across the table at the CEO of a small marketing firm that I was coaching.

I suddenly saw a connection, as she struggled to accept the value of her newest service offerings. The streamlined approach simplified her workload, which compelled her to reduce prices that were already under valued. She was basing the asking price on her ability to streamline her work efforts rather than on the service’s value to the customer.

Many small firm executives struggle with the perception that unless it involves a melee of sorts, the service or product must be priced lower to justify its value. Truth be told, in today’s market the client’s outcome determines the services value.

Executives can learn to position their services based on the value of the recipient’s outcome by following the below 4 Steps.

1. Value Your Clients Success

Last year I coached a small business owner whose declining revenue numbers suggested his doors would close within 6-12 months. I was asked to increase the store’s sales in whatever manner might work. While my strategy was foreign to the team, I was fully supported and given an expense account to implement my action plans.

Within 6-8 months the measureable results had increased the revenue percentage by double digits and brought in about 130 new customers. Each customer spent an average of $1,000 per visit—a 100% increase over the national average order size benchmark. The elated owner said, “You’re worth ten times what I’m paying you!” I suddenly realized that my value was in the end result, not in how much I struggle or sweat.

By placing a focused value on the outcome, clients are willing to pay for those results. Most will not care how much it costs, if it’s a small percentage of the revenue it generates. Everyone likes a project to pay for itself and then some. The happy client is always the one who gets the results they asked for, not the one who saved money and is forced to close down.

2. Value Your Ingenuity of Development

One business I coached never front loaded any lessons learned or ramp up time when starting a new project. The owner felt that his customers shouldn’t have to pay for his education, especially if it is required on their project.

I asked him what his greatest value was that drew his customers. He pointed out that they come to him because of his expertise. It didn’t take long for him to realize that his learning curve on the current project would soon be a part of his expertise and of great value to his customer.

I suggested his ingenuity, education and development time, which are his greatest assets, should be included within his pricing. After fidgeting a bit, he agreed to charge 50% of the learning costs since the customer would gain from his new knowledge.

Companies are willing to hire someone who can figure things out quickly to get them up to speed in new market areas. Whenever someone comes along with similar, but not exact experience, they are snapped up for the sake of speed to market. The cost is never the issue; the only concern is productivity and timeliness of release. So all ingenuity during the development stage is of great value whether learned on the job or outside of it.

End of part 1 of 3. Part 2 covers steps 3 & 4 with part 3 providing sample pricing.

© 2017 by CJ Powers