Loading...
Loading...
Expert pricing strategy and monetization guidance for SaaS and digital products. Use when designing pricing tiers, creating pricing pages, setting value metrics, developing bundle strategies, planning price increases, writing pricing copy, analyzing competitive pricing, or optimizing annual vs monthly positioning. Use for packaging decisions, discount policies, enterprise pricing, and behavioral pricing tactics.
npx skill4agent add ncklrs/startup-os-skills pricing-strategistrules/psychology-*packaging-*metrics-*page-*enterprise-*lifecycle-*┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ VALUE CREATION │
│ What problem do you solve? How well? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ VALUE COMMUNICATION │
│ How do you convey value through pricing? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ VALUE CAPTURE │
│ How much value do you extract as price? │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘| Model | Best For | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Per-seat | Collaboration tools | Predictable, scales with adoption | Discourages sharing |
| Usage-based | Infrastructure, API | Aligns with value, low entry | Unpredictable revenue |
| Flat-rate | Simple products | Easy to understand | Leaves money on table |
| Tiered | Most SaaS | Captures segments | Can be complex |
| Hybrid | Mature products | Flexible, optimized | Harder to communicate |
| Criteria | Question | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Easy to understand | Can you explain it in 5 words? | "Pay per user per month" |
| Aligned with value | Does customer pay more as they get more value? | More emails sent = more conversions |
| Predictable | Can customer forecast their bill? | Seat count is predictable |
| Scalable | Does it grow with the customer? | API calls scale with usage |
High WTP │ ●●● Enterprise
│ ●●●●●
│ ●●●●●●● Pro
│ ●●●●●●●●●
│●●●●●●●●●●● Starter
Low WTP │●●●●●●●●●●●●●
└────────────────────
Few Many
Customers| Principle | How It Works | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Anchoring | First price sets expectations | Show enterprise price first |
| Decoy effect | Third option makes one look better | Middle tier becomes attractive |
| Charm pricing | 9-ending feels cheaper | $99 vs $100 |
| Price partitioning | Split price seems smaller | $50/mo + $20 support |
| Round numbers | Feel more premium | $1,000 for enterprise |
| Tier | Target | Feature Strategy | Pricing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Good (Starter) | Entry-level, price-sensitive | Core features, limited usage | Low anchor |
| Better (Pro) | Growth, main target | Full features, higher limits | Optimal margin |
| Best (Enterprise) | High-value, complex needs | Unlimited, premium support | Value-based |
| Strategy | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Usage limits | Cap quantity/volume | 1,000 vs 10,000 emails |
| Feature gates | Reserve features for higher tiers | SSO in Enterprise |
| Support tiers | Differentiate service level | Email vs dedicated CSM |
| SLA guarantees | Higher uptime commitments | 99.9% vs 99.99% |
| Integration access | Limit connection types | Basic vs premium integrations |
| Factor | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Discount | Baseline | 15-20% off (2 months free) |
| Cash flow | Spread out | Upfront capital |
| Churn | Higher (monthly exit) | Lower (commitment) |
| Target | Skeptics, small biz | Confident, enterprise |
| Positioning | "Flexibility" | "Best value" |