Focus on markets where customers value their time more than money and are less price-sensitive. This strategy accelerates profitability by targeting buyers who can easily afford your solution to their high-value problems, as they will part with their money more easily.

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Founders often mistakenly start with low-margin, mass-market products (the "save the whales" syndrome), which makes the business look damaged. A better strategy is to start at the high end with less price-sensitive customers. This builds a premium brand and generates the capital required to address the broader market later.

The process of building a business must start with identifying the ideal customer. The product, offer, messaging, and channels should all be reverse-engineered from that initial choice. Delaying this decision limits leverage and leads to wasted effort on a mismatched offer.

Don't let your personal perception of what's 'expensive' limit your earning potential. Set your price high based on the value you provide. It is easy to lower a price that gets no buyers, but impossible to know if you could have charged more if you start too low. Never say no for the customer.

Ditch the aspirational "Ideal Client Profile," which represents a rare, perfect-world scenario. Instead, build a "Target Client Profile" that defines which customers will perceive the most meaningful value from your offering. This provides a realistic, operational benchmark for qualifying leads.

When designing a premium service, prioritize reducing the time to value (latency). For affluent customers, time is more valuable than money. A promise to deliver the desired outcome in half the time is a far more persuasive selling point than a discount or greater magnitude of result.

Counterintuitively, selling high-value solutions to wealthy individuals or large companies often involves less friction. Affluent buyers with significant pain points focus on the value of the solution and have the budget, simplifying the sales cycle.

The math behind a high-ticket offer is often misunderstood. Since these services are typically 100% margin, a small number of buyers can drastically outperform the profit from your main product. A 10x priced offer sold to just 10% of customers can double revenue and triple profits.

The same work provides exponentially more value to a larger company. A sales page optimization that adds $40k for a small business could add $4M for a larger one. This allows you to charge a massive premium for identical work by targeting higher-value customers who benefit more.

Despite 70% of the market being controlled by HOAs, the advice is to focus on "scatter" individual homes. The HOA market is an auction where the lowest bid wins, destroying margins. By focusing on individual homeowners, the business can control its pricing, maintain higher margins, and avoid a race to the bottom.

Price sensitivity decreases when customers have absolute clarity on what they're buying, when technicians present options with confidence, and when the business consistently provides multiple choices. These three "C's" build perceived value, allowing for higher prices.