Let me tell you a quick story to put this in perspective. I had a gentleman call me about three years ago. He was excited to have Ignite Spot do the accounting and coaching for his business.
At one point in the conversation he said, “I really don’t have more than $100 a month to spend.” I've heard that several times before and I hated it. In my industry, I have competitors that will do bookkeeping and accounting work for pennies on the dollar because they hire staff overseas.
We don’t do that.
I made a decision that day to do what I'm about to teach you now. Since then, I've never had that conversation come up, and we don’t lose nearly as many sales opportunities.
Here's how it works.
When you try to attract people with low pricing, who do you think will show up? Cheap pricing attracts difficult relationships.
When you learn how to charge more, several things happen including:
You’re the kind of person that wants to be the best. I know because you’re researching how to do that. Do yourself a favor and decide that you’re worth more. Image how great it will feel when you can afford to provide top tier service to your clients.
You can’t just increase prices and hope for the best. You need to reframe your product or service in the minds of your prospects. They need to see concrete value.
If you're seen as the Ferrari and you’re still losing out to lower priced options, you're either marketing to the wrong people or you’ve increased prices without adding tangible value.
Quick example: There are some accounting firms in our industry that charge quite a bit. When I ask them why, they always say something like “We have over 200 years of combined professional experience”.
My response… So #$&@$ what?!
That kind of value proposition is vague and nobody cares. It doesn't benefit the customer directly. It only strokes the ego's of the partners at the accounting firm.
At Ignite Spot, we do several things to make our customers lives better including:
See the difference? If you want to learn how to charge more, find concrete ways to be useful to your clients.
Now that you know how to charge more, you need to know how to respond when a customer tries to beat you up on pricing.
When someone asks you to charge less, here's what I want you to say:
“I appreciate your concern. If you would like to find the cheapest solution possible, I would encourage you to do so. However, I know how important getting this problem solved is to you, and sometimes it’s worth investing in the right solution because it will work the way you expect it to. We’re not the cheapest provider in town, but we promise to knock your socks off with…”
At the end, simply list the tangible and concrete things that make you the best in the industry.
If you found this article helpful to your business, spread the love and share it on Google + or Twitter. There may be other business owners out there that want to learn how to charge more for what they do. You never know.
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