
I once worked with a graphic designer who thought she was running a profitable business.
She charged $500 for logo packages. Her calendar stayed full. Clients seemed happy. By every visible measure, things looked good.
Then we calculated her actual numbers.
Each logo package took about 15 hours when you counted revisions, client meetings, and admin work. Her software subscriptions, taxes, healthcare, and business expenses added up. When we laid it all out, she needed to charge at least $1,200 just to break even at a reasonable hourly rate.
The gap was $700 per project.
She was working for less than minimum wage while convinced she was profitable. That $700 gap represents the most common pricing mistake I see in small businesses—and it reveals something important about how we think about value, fear, and what it means to build a sustainable business.
The Arithmetic That Changes Everything
When I showed her the $700 gap, her first reaction was fear.
"If I raise my prices, I'll lose all my clients."
This fear is understandable. It feels safer to keep clients at any price than to risk losing them. But this thinking contains a dangerous assumption: that the business she was protecting was worth protecting.
The shift happened when we stopped talking about emotions and started talking about arithmetic.
I put the numbers in front of her and said: "You're afraid of losing work, but the work you're protecting isn't paying you properly. The real risk isn't losing clients. The real risk is keeping them."
Research from pricing psychology shows that consumers are more averse to perceived losses than they are inclined toward equivalent gains. This cognitive bias—called loss aversion—explains why she felt trapped. She was focusing on what she might lose rather than what she was already losing every day.
Three Conversations That Unlock Price Increases
Moving past pricing fear requires three specific conversations.
First: Show the true economics of one job
Most business owners underestimate the real cost of delivering their service. They count direct hours but forget revisions, admin time, follow-up emails, software subscriptions, and overhead.
When you map out everything that goes into one project, the margin often shrinks to almost nothing. In her case, once we included all the hidden time and costs, her profit per logo was negligible.
Seeing this clearly weakens the fear because you can no longer pretend the current pricing is safe.
Second: Reframe what "losing a client" actually means
"If a client leaves because you moved from an unprofitable price to a sustainable one, that's not a loss. That's the market telling you that client only worked at your expense."
This is often the turning point.
Many business owners treat every departing client as failure. But some clients should leave. The ones who only stay because you're underpriced are actively weakening your business. You're not losing clients—you're filtering for the right ones.
Third: Reduce psychological risk through controlled experiments
Instead of raising all prices at once, start with new clients. Or increase prices on your bottom 20 percent of clients—the ones who take the most time and complain the most.
This makes the change feel like an experiment rather than a leap off a cliff. You're testing the market's response with limited downside.
What Actually Happened When She Raised Prices
She increased her rate to $1,200 for new clients and sent careful notifications to existing clients about upcoming changes.
The result? About 15 percent of her clients left. The remaining 85 percent stayed.
Her revenue held steady because each remaining client was now properly priced. But the business fundamentally changed. Better margins meant less resentment. Fewer high-maintenance clients meant more energy for good work. More room in her schedule meant she could take on better projects.
The business became smaller in volume but stronger financially.
This pattern repeats across industries. According to research from Forrester Research, companies that focus on communicating value during price changes see 20% higher customer satisfaction scores. The clients who stay aren't just tolerating the increase—they understand it.
The Five Factors You're Probably Ignoring
When I ask small business owners how they set prices, most say they looked at competitors. That's useful information, but it's incomplete.
Competitor pricing tells you one thing: what others charge. It doesn't tell you whether their price is sustainable, whether their offer matches yours, or whether they're making money.
Here are the five factors that should inform your pricing strategy:
1. Your cost structure
What does it actually cost you to deliver this service? Include everything: direct costs, overhead, software, admin time, revisions, and the opportunity cost of your time.
2. The value you create
Does your work increase revenue, reduce costs, save time, reduce risk, or prevent mistakes? If yes, your price should reflect the outcome, not just your hours.
3. Market context
What do competitors charge, and how does your offer compare? Are you faster, more specialized, more experienced, or more reliable?
4. Your positioning
Are you competing on price, speed, quality, or expertise? Your pricing should reinforce that position. Premium positioning requires premium pricing.
5. Your business model
Does this price build a business worth owning? Can you deliver this service repeatedly at this price and still grow?
Most businesses only consider factors one and three. They ignore value, positioning, and long-term sustainability. That's how you end up busy but broke.
The Lululemon Lesson: When Premium Pricing Works
Lululemon charges over $100 for yoga pants. Their production costs don't justify that price. Competitors offer similar products for half the cost.
Yet Lululemon maintains explosive growth with minimal discounting.
Their strategy demonstrates value-based pricing in action. They're not pricing based on cost or competition. They're pricing based on perceived value: quality materials, durability, brand status, exceptional service, and the complete customer experience.
Customers perceive Lululemon products as investments in their wellbeing, not just apparel purchases. That perception justifies the premium.
Small businesses can apply the same principle. You don't need a luxury brand to use value-based pricing. You need clarity about the outcome you deliver and the confidence to price accordingly.
How to Identify Your Actual Competitive Advantage
When clients ask me, "Why should someone pay me more?" I don't start with theory. I start with evidence.
First, I ask why clients actually buy, stay, and refer. Not what the owner hopes is true, but what clients consistently mention. If buyers keep saying "You're faster," that points to speed. If they say "You understand our industry," that's specialization. If they say "We trust your judgment," that's experience.
Second, I compare their offer against competitors in plain terms. Where do they clearly outperform? Faster turnaround, fewer errors, better strategic advice, stronger service, better results, less hand-holding required, or lower risk.
Third, I look at what they can defend. Speed matters only if you can deliver it consistently. Specialization matters only if it's real and visible in your work. Experience matters only if it leads to better decisions or outcomes.
Your advantage has to be specific and observable.
Then I reduce it to one sentence: "Clients pay you more because you deliver X outcome better than most alternatives." If you can't finish that sentence clearly, you're not ready to justify premium pricing.
When Clients Say "But Your Competitor Charges Half That"
This objection appears in almost every pricing conversation. Here's how I respond:
"Competitor pricing by itself doesn't tell us whether their price is sustainable, whether their offer is comparable, or whether they're making money. Cheap prices are common. Profitable prices are less common."
Then I bring it back to three possibilities:
"Either your competitor is more efficient than you, they're offering less than you, or they're underpricing. Those are very different situations. We shouldn't assume their price is the correct one for your business."
The goal is to shift the conversation from fear to differentiation. Not "Can we be as cheap?" but "Why should the right client pay us more?"
If a client leaves because someone else charges half your price, they were probably never buying on value in the first place. Matching that price wins the job but traps you in low-margin work.
The Principle That Changes Everything
If I could teach every small business owner one pricing principle from day one, it would be this:
Revenue is not validation. Profitable revenue is validation.
Many business owners think that if people are buying, the price must be right. That's one of the most expensive mistakes they can make. A business can be busy, admired, and growing while still underpriced and quietly weakening itself.
Every sale must contribute properly to profit, owner pay, overhead, and future stability. If it doesn't, you're not building a business—you're buying revenue with your own time and resources.
The question isn't "Can I get someone to buy at this price?"
The question is "Does this price build a business worth owning?"
How to Communicate a Price Increase
Once you've decided to raise prices, communication determines whether clients stay or leave.
Research shows that companies who proactively prepare for objections experience 35% less customer loss during price adjustments. Transparent communication can reduce negative responses by up to 45%.
Here's the script I recommend:
"Beginning [date], my rate for this service will be [new price]. This reflects the scope of work involved and allows me to continue delivering the level of service my clients expect."
No apology. No long defense. Just clarity.
Give at least three months' notice for existing clients. This allows time for planning and budgeting. For new clients, implement the increase immediately.
In practice, fewer clients leave than most business owners fear. And even when some do leave, profit often improves quickly because the business is no longer filled with underpaid work.
The Real Cost of Underpricing
That graphic designer's $700 gap wasn't just about money. It was about sustainability, energy, and the kind of business she was building.
Underpricing creates a business that depends on volume to survive. You need more clients to make the same profit, which means less time per client, lower quality work, and constant pressure to keep the pipeline full.
It also attracts the wrong clients—the ones who choose you because you're cheap, not because you're good. These clients often demand the most and appreciate the least.
Proper pricing creates the opposite dynamic. You can serve fewer clients better. You attract people who value your expertise. You have room to invest in your craft and grow your capabilities.
The business you build depends on the prices you charge.
What This Means for Your Business
If you're reading this and recognizing yourself in the graphic designer's story, you're not alone. Most small businesses underprice at some point. The question is what you do about it.
Start by calculating your real costs for one typical project. Include everything. Then ask whether your current price builds a sustainable business.
If the answer is no, you have a choice. You can keep protecting unprofitable work, or you can make the arithmetic work in your favor.
The clients who only stay because you're cheap will leave eventually anyway—either when you raise prices or when you burn out and close. The clients who value what you do will understand a price that reflects your actual worth.
You're not losing clients when you raise prices. You're making room for the right ones.





