Value Pricing Formula

After fifteen years of extensive research, VeraSage has determined firms should use the following formula to derive a Value Price.Start with: Estimated Hours x Hourly Rate (this will establish a cost accounting minimum floor beneath your pricing).Add the following premiums if you are offering them to your customer:

  • A fixed price: add 12.613% (this is similar to the premium charged for a fixed rate mortgage versus a variable rate mortgage).
  • If you utilize change orders, add 3.14% (again, because you are offering fixed prices for all scope creep).
  • If you offer a service guarantee, add 22.245% (a service that is guaranteed is worth more than a service that isn't).
  • If you offer a price guarantee, add 16.301% (this insures the customer they don't have to pay for work they didn't authorize).
  • If you offer payment terms structured around the customer's cyclical cash flow, add 14.729% (customers have budgets, they will value this highly).
  • Since all value is subjective, add a "black box" component of 25.298% to reflect this fact.

If you follow the above the formula, you will accurately Value Price all of your work, and invert the now artificial ceiling of hourly billing to a floor.

Ron Baker

Ron is a Founder of the VeraSage Institute and Radio talk-show host.

E-mail | Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

http://thesoulofenterprise.com
Previous
Previous

Article review: The truth about selling value

Next
Next

Blog Talk Radio Interviews Ron Baker