Find your optimal pricing strategy
Value-based pricing tip: If your work generates $10K+ value for clients, charging based on value rather than hours can significantly increase revenue.
Price psychology: Prices ending in 7 or 9 (e.g., $1940) often convert better than round numbers.
What is this?
A data-driven pricing tool that helps freelancers and service providers find their optimal price point by analyzing multiple scenarios.
Why it matters:
"I doubled my prices and barely lost clients" — smart pricing isn't about being the cheapest, it's about finding the sweet spot between value and demand.
How to use:
1. Enter your current metrics. 2. Review the scenario analysis. 3. Find your optimal price point based on profit goals and client capacity.
Pro tip:
Test different price points with new clients first, then gradually adjust for existing ones.
Test price points, margin scenarios, and positioning tradeoffs so you can move toward stronger pricing decisions with less guesswork. This page is built for people who want a fast path to a working result, not a vague prompt-and-pray workflow. If you need a more reliable first draft, cleaner output, or a repeatable workflow you can hand to a teammate, Pricing Strategy Tool is designed to shorten that path.
Most visitors use Pricing Strategy Tool because they need something specific done now: a deliverable, a decision, or a workflow checkpoint. The sections below show the fastest way to get value from the tool and the adjacent pages that help you keep going.
Use the tool when pricing decisions feel too subjective or politically loaded.
Built for teams that know pricing matters but do not want to make the call on vibes alone.
Model price points before changing plans publicly
Test how pricing affects conversion and perception
Evaluate packaging and margin tradeoffs more clearly
A strong outcome from Pricing Strategy Tool is not just “some output.” It should be usable with minimal cleanup, aligned to the task you opened the page for, and specific enough that you can paste it into the next step of your workflow without rewriting everything from scratch.
If the first pass feels too generic, use the use cases, FAQs, and related pages here to tighten the scope. That usually produces better results faster than starting over in a blank chat.