When offering services like community management (Membership.io) or payment recovery, propose a revenue-share model. This is an irresistible offer for clients, as you only get paid a percentage of the *new* revenue you create for them. It eliminates their risk and aligns your incentives perfectly with theirs.
Embed a clause in client agreements requiring them to report back when they achieve a win, and have them initial it. This tactic isn't primarily for marketing, but to create a psychological contract that holds the client accountable for building on their success, reinforcing the value of the partnership.
To quickly build trust and incentivize affiliates (like wedding planners), offer them 100% of the revenue from the first one or two clients they refer. This proves your quality at no risk to them, demonstrating value and securing a long-term, profitable referral relationship.
SaaS companies serving SMBs in non-tech industries can create a new revenue stream by offering a managed service—using humans-in-the-loop but framed as an "AI boost"—to run marketing campaigns for them. This provides immense value and captures more of the customer's budget.
To ensure sales reps focus on long-term value (LTV), structure compensation to reward customer success. Pay half the commission on contract signing and the other half only when the customer hits a predefined activation metric, known as the Leading Indicator of Retention (LIR). This forces reps to sell to right-fit customers.
To significantly increase your income, stop selling discrete skills or tasks. Instead, solve larger business problems tied to revenue and growth. Taking ownership of a client's outcome, rather than just executing instructions, makes you vastly more valuable and allows you to charge retainers instead of hourly rates.
Begin by offering AI consulting or services. This provides immediate cash flow and deep customer insights with a 70-80% margin. Use this experience to document workflows and then productize the solution into a scalable software product with ~95% margins.
The most profitable way to leverage AI tools without code is to package their output as a managed service. Instead of selling access to an AI, sell lead generation, process automation, or financial analysis on a monthly retainer, with the AI doing the heavy lifting behind the scenes.
Instead of pursuing complex, open-ended consulting projects, partners can scale more effectively by creating productized, "turnkey AI" offerings for specific business units like legal or marketing. This approach lowers the adoption barrier for customers by delivering predictable results for a defined use case, making it easier to sell into departments or smaller businesses.
Enterprises are comfortable buying services. Sell a service engagement first, powered by your technology on the back end, to get your foot in the door. This builds trust and bypasses procurement hurdles associated with new software. Later, you can transition them to a SaaS product model.
In the age of AI, software is shifting from a tool that assists humans to an agent that completes tasks. The pricing model should reflect this. Instead of a subscription for access (a license), charge for the value created when the AI successfully achieves a business outcome.