Set your price not by what you feel you're worth, but by what the market will bear. Continuously increase your price until you receive consistent rejections. That point of friction is your current market value. Treat the "no" as essential data, not a personal offense, to find your price ceiling.

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When selling high-ticket services, don't raise prices incrementally. Instead, make a significant jump (e.g., from $3,800 to $8,000). If it doesn't sell, you've gained valuable market data and can simply re-price the next cohort. The upside of finding a new price ceiling far outweighs the risk of a single failed launch.

When a prospect says your price is too high, reframe the conversation away from cost. Ask them, 'Independent of price, are we the vendor of choice?' This forces them to recommit to you as the best solution or admit they're still evaluating, strengthening your negotiation leverage.

You cannot consistently achieve an income level that you don't subconsciously believe you deserve. Your internal self-worth dictates your confidence and ability to make the necessary asks to reach higher earnings.

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.

To set your price, ask clients what they would do if your service didn't exist. Their answer, like hiring a full-time employee, reveals the 'replacement value.' This figure provides a concrete benchmark for your pricing and uncovers powerful marketing language.

Price objections don't stem from the buyer's ignorance, but from the seller's failure to establish clear economic value. Before revealing the cost, you must build a business case. If the prospect balks at the price, the fault lies with your value proposition, not their budget.

Instead of viewing your limited one-on-one time as an unscalable weakness, frame it as an extremely scarce resource. This fixed, low supply naturally drives up price. The goal isn't asking if a task is 'worth your time,' but setting a price that makes it worth your time.

When starting out, don't just charge a low fee. Instead, state your full market-rate price and offer a significant discount (e.g., 50%) as an introductory offer. This establishes your true value from the beginning while still winning the client. Then, systematically raise your price every few clients.

When negotiating a price increase, if the customer accepts immediately without pushback, it’s a strong signal you've significantly underpriced your product. Buildots' founder prepared for a negotiation over a 4x price increase, but the client agreed instantly, revealing the product's true value.

Don't overcomplicate defining value. The simplest and most accurate measure is whether a customer will exchange money for your solution. If they won't pay, your product is not valuable enough to them, regardless of its perceived benefits.