Setting Pricing for a Startup - The Rule of 80%

In just the last week, two different people have come to me to get feedback on their pricing. One was a startup selling a very sophisticated product to corporate enterprises. The other was selling consulting services to individuals, small businesses, and trade associations. In both cases, however, the questions were the same: how should I price this on a per-head basis? When should I charge a flat fee? How do I make sure I'm not leaving money on the table? How do I make sure I'm not losing customers? First thing I said was: you need to have a public rate table. I believe that people like to comparison shop, but that they only choose amongst those providers who make it easy to compare prices. If you provide a rate up front, you are at a substantial competitive advantage to your competitors who require potential customers to fill in a lead generation form. Second, if you have a premium product and you have a competitive advantage because you make it easier for customers to compare you against the competition, for the love of God, raise your rates. Higher costs are a signaling mechanism that you're selling a premium product. I can't find a link, but there's an apocryphal tale that Cadillac sales actually went down in the 1980s when Cadillac lowered prices. Traditional economics says that lower prices means you move right on the demand curve, leading to higher sales, but it didn't happen because consumers thought the lower prices were a signal of lower quality. OK, now that we'd established better base rates, the question came down to how do we set the appropriate levels based on demand? Surely you want to have quantity discounts, especially for those parts of the business that are easily scalable. Well, to start, let's take a look at a business I know intimately well. Here are my rates for business consulting and GMAT tutoring services (two wildly divergent services, one simple rate table):
| Hours | Per Hour |
| 1-4 | $150.00 |
| 5-9 | $125.00 |
| 10 or more | $100.00 |
As you can see, there's a substantial price break for pre-paying for more hours. This allows me to better manage my schedule and worry less about new client recruitment, and it encourages my clients to buy more hours as they get more "bang for their buck". It's a traditional win-win situation.
| Dropbox | ||
| GB | Price Per GB | % of Previous |
| 0 | ||
| 1 | ||
| 2 | ||
| 3 | $39.96 | |
| 4 | $29.97 | 75% |
| 5 | $23.98 | 80% |
| 6 | $19.98 | 83% |
| 7 | $17.13 | 86% |
| 8 | $14.99 | 88% |
| 9 | $13.32 | 89% |
| 10 | $11.99 | 90% |
| Basecamp | ||
| GB | Price Per GB | % of Previous |
| 0 | ||
| 1 | $288.00 | |
| 2 | $144.00 | 50% |
| 3 | $96.00 | 67% |
| 4 | $147.00 | 153% |
| 5 | $117.60 | 80% |
| 6 | $98.00 | 83% |
| 7 | $84.00 | 86% |
| 8 | $73.50 | 88% |
| 9 | $65.33 | 89% |
| 10 | $58.80 | 90% |
| Freshbooks | ||
| Clients | Price Per Client | % of Previous |
| 0 | ||
| 1 | ||
| 2 | ||
| 3 | ||
| 4 | $57.00 | |
| 5 | $45.60 | 80% |
| 6 | $38.00 | 83% |
| 7 | $32.57 | 86% |
| 8 | $28.50 | 88% |
| 9 | $25.33 | 89% |
| 10 | $22.80 | 90% |
That's right - early on, there's a lot of 80-something percents in the per-unit differences. So here's my rule: The rule of 80%. For anyone selling on an incremental basis, set your break points that the per-unit costs of the new tier are 80% of the per-unit cost for the previous tier. If you're a consultant, whatever your break points are, charge 80% on a per-hour basis at your breaks. If you charge $1000 an hour, whatever your break point is - 5 hours, 10 hours, 1000 hours, make sure the per-hour charge after the break point is no more than $800 an hour. If you sell beer at $5 a bottle, make sure the cost of a six pack (the logical break point) is no more than $24, for a per-unit cost of $4. If you're selling at a fixed price, it's a no more complex. You just must make sure that your break point from your first paid tier to your second paid tier is high enough to clear the 80s on the light line and it gets into the 90 percent range. If you set your second paid tier too early, before the dramatic savings in per-unit use peter out, your customers will be able to "feel" that you're trying to rip them off and they may not sign up with you in the first place. Once you give them enough goodies at the first paid tier, then you can feel free to ratchet things up - just make sure that your third and fourth tier ratchets don't kick in until the per-unit cost is at or below the limits of the previous tier. (Essentially, make sure your dark line is at the low point in the graph before you create a new tier.) Well, based on this rule, it looks like 37signals is ripping users off on their Plus plan when compared to their Basic plan. Perhaps that's why they highlight the Plus plan - to avoid comparisons to the Basic plan in favor of comparisons to their Premium and Max plans, where the Plus plan does look like a fair deal. Or, perhaps, maybe the per-GB comparison is the wrong one. So let's take a look at the per-project comparison:
Well, shiver me timbers, but that looks just like the other graphs in the series: same severe downslope with humps in the dark line, same gentle curve with spikes in the lighter line, but no spikes until you hit the 90's.
Now, of course, I'd recommend that 37signals bumps up storage on their Basic plan, with the attendant bumps down the line, but hey, that's just me and my Rule of 80%.
9 comments
1 person: 15 euro per hour
2 people: 10 euro per hour per person (66%)
3 people: 8 euro per hour per person (80%)
But according to your schema it should be
1 person: 15 euro per hour
2 people: 12 euro per hour per person (80%)
3 people: 10 euro per hour per person (81%)
And this feels more balanced. In the same time i realize a mistake in my pricing -- the first big drop from 15 to 10 (66%) could make customers feel that the regular price is overpriced, and i'm not being fair to them. But that is definitely not the case. I just wanted the benefit to be "equally fair" for both sides. I thought this way: if two people come and i charge them 10 euro each, i will win 5 euro more, and each of them will pay 5 euros less -- everyone wins 5 euro. For three people I win 9 euro and each of them they wins 7 euro.
Now i realize that the first drop to 66% could make them feel bad about me. On the other hand it could stimulate them stronger to find some buddy and come together. This happened recently, when a student found 2 buddies after I told him about the discount. What do you think -- should I keep my pricing, or switch to the 80% rule?




