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Price Without Fear, with pricing expert Andrew Bailey

May 28, 2025 by John Ray

Price Without Fear, with pricing expert Andrew Bailey, on The Price and Value Journey podcast with host John Ray
North Fulton Studio
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Price Without Fear, with pricing expert Andrew Bailey, on The Price and Value Journey podcast with host John Ray

Price Without Fear, with pricing expert Andrew Bailey (The Price and Value Journey, Episode 134)

In this episode of The Price and Value Journey, pricing expert Andrew Bailey joins host John Ray to explore why fear and hesitation dominate so many conversations around pricing. Drawing on his extensive experience as a pricing strategist and negotiation coach, Andrew shares how solo and small firm professionals can move from anxiety to confidence by focusing on outcomes, shifting mindset, and learning how to express value more clearly.

They discuss why price communicates more than numbers, how to handle pricing objections without falling into discount traps, and why clarity, not persuasion, is the key to powerful pricing conversations. If you struggle with how to price your services, talk about your worth, or respond to pushback, this conversation offers clarity, practical advice, and a fresh mindset.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of the Business RadioX® podcast network.

Key Takeaways from Andrew Bailey in this Episode

  • Pricing is not just a financial decision. It’s a story you tell your clients about your value. Too often, professionals price to be liked or to avoid losing business, rather than pricing to reflect their true impact.
  • Confidence at the pricing table comes from clarity. When you can articulate the results you deliver and back them up with real-world evidence, you can name your price without flinching.
  • Negotiation is often misunderstood. It’s not about tricks, pressure, or pushing for discounts. It’s about clear communication, options that fit the client’s goals, and being willing to walk away when a fit isn’t right.

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction and Guest Welcome
02:04 The Psychology of Pricing
05:26 Overcoming Fear in Pricing
09:06 Building Confidence in Pricing
17:39 Value Proposition vs. Client-Defined Value
21:20 Quantifying and Monetizing Value
23:16 The Importance of Price in Business
23:41 Building Strong Client Relationships
24:45 The Value Conversation
25:43 Effective Client Engagement
31:18 The Role of Introverts in Sales
34:05 Negotiation Strategies
44:48 Confident Pricing Communication
47:54 Conclusion and Contact Information

Andrew Bailey

Andrew Bailey
Andrew Bailey

Andrew talks about 4 skills that combine to give people and businesses the confidence to “price without fear” and achieve the profit they deserve.

With so many businesses undervaluing what they do, he helps people discover and quantify value, price to their value, powerfully sell their proposition and negotiate with confidence and strength.

Andrew works with many businesses from corporate multinationals to SMEs, in the private and public sectors in a range of industries from consumer goods, construction, drinks and tobacco to online retailing, IT, printing, leisure, professional services and education.

He has published a book outlining his distinct approach, is writing his second book on pricing, value and negotiating, and is asked to contribute to other publications. He regularly speaks at events and seminars on pricing, value and negotiating and has his own podcast as a way of reaching more people.

Holding an MBA from Nottingham Business School, Andrew is also a guest lecturer at the Business School amongst others and teaches undergraduates, business students and company executives on the Executive Education Programme. He has been recognized and awarded fellowships by a number of business organizations, including the Chartered Inst. of Marketing, the Institute of Directors and the Chartered Management Institute.

Website | LinkedIn

About The Price and Value Journey Podcast

The Price and Value Journey is a show for expert-service professionals who want more than formulas and quick fixes. If you’re a solo or small-firm provider—consultant, coach, attorney, CPA, or fractional executive—you know the real work of building a practice goes far beyond pricing. It’s about finding clarity, showing up with confidence, and learning how to express the full value of what you do in ways that clients understand and appreciate.

The Price and Value Journey Podcast with host John RayHosted by John Ray, business advisor and author of The Generosity Mindset, this podcast explores the deeper journey behind running a services business: how you think about your work, how you relate to clients, and how you sustain a business that’s not only profitable but deeply fulfilling. Yes, we talk pricing, but we also talk mindset, business development, trust, empathy, positioning, and all the intangible ingredients that make a practice thrive.

With solo episodes and conversations featuring thoughtful guests, The Price and Value Journey is a companion for professionals who are building something meaningful. Produced in partnership with North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®, the podcast is accessible on all major podcast platforms. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include business coaching and advisory work, as well as advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, coaches, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a podcast show host, strategist, and the owner of North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®. John and his team work with B2B professionals to create and conduct their podcast using The Generosity Mindset® Method: building and deepening relationships in a non-salesy way that translates into revenue for their business.

John is also the host of North Fulton Business Radio. With over 850 shows and having featured over 1,300 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in its region like no one else.

John’s book, The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices

The Generosity Mindset, by John RayJohn is the #1 national best-selling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

If you are a professional services provider, your goal is to do transformative work for clients you love working with and get paid commensurate with the value you deliver to them. While negative mindsets can inhibit your growth, adopting a different mindset, The Generosity Mindset™, can replace those self-limiting beliefs. The Generosity Mindset enables you to diagnose and communicate the value you deliver to clients and, in turn, more effectively price to receive a portion of that value.

Whether you’re a consultant, coach, marketing or branding professional, business advisor, attorney, CPA, or work in virtually any other professional services discipline, your content and technical expertise are not proprietary. What’s unique, though, is your experience and how you synthesize and deliver your knowledge. What’s special is your demeanor or the way you deal with your best-fit clients. What’s invaluable is how you deliver outstanding value by guiding people through massive changes in their personal lives and in their businesses that bring them to a place they never thought possible.

Your combination of these elements is unique in your industry. There lies your value, but it’s not the value you see. It’s the value your best-fit customers see in you.

If pricing your value feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar to you, this book will teach you why putting a price on the value your clients perceive and identify serves both them and you, and you’ll learn the factors involved in getting your price right.

The book is available at all major physical and online book retailers worldwide. Follow this link for further details.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: Andrew Bailey, changing your pricing mindset, introverts in sales, John Ray, pricing, pricing strategy, The Price and Value Journey, value conversation, value proposition

Positioning From the Client’s Perspective

April 1, 2024 by John Ray

Positioning from the Client's Perspective, John Ray Price and Value Journey
North Fulton Studio
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Positioning from the Client's Perspective, John Ray Price and Value Journey

Positioning From the Client’s Perspective

John Ray discusses a misconception held by some solopreneurs and small firm professional services providers: that their value and positioning start with their credentials. Through a storytelling approach involving a conversation with a leadership coach, Ray illustrates the importance of framing one’s value from the client’s perspective rather than merely showcasing certifications. He emphasizes that clients seek value based on their own perceptions and challenges. Effective positioning should thus focus on understanding and articulating how one’s services address specific client issues. Positioning in this manner leads to better pricing and client satisfaction.

This episode was adapted from the February 1, 2024 edition of John’s newsletter, The Price and Value Journey.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Welcome to The Price and Value Journey
00:05 The Misconception of Positioning in Professional Services
00:22 A Real-World Example: A Leadership Coach
01:41 The Importance of Value from the Client’s Perspective
02:24 Shifting the Conversation: From Certification to Solving Problems
03:05 The Power of Client-Centric Positioning
04:05 Closing Remarks and Contact Information

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional service providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing that reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line and the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is hosted and produced by John Ray and the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The show can also be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of "The Price and Value Journey"
John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include business coaching and advisory work, as well as advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, coaches, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Show Host and Producer and owns the North Fulton (Georgia) studio of Business RadioX®. John and his team work with B2B professionals to create and conduct their own podcast using The Generosity Mindset™ Method:  building and deepening relationships in a non-salesy way that translates into revenue for their business.

John is also the host of North Fulton Business Radio. With over 750 shows and having featured over 1,200 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in its region like no one else.

John’s Book, The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices

The Generosity Mindset, by John RayJohn is the #1 National Bestselling Author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

If you are a professional services provider, your goal is to do transformative work for clients you love working with and get paid commensurate with the value you deliver to those clients. While negative mindsets can inhibit your growth, adopting a different mindset, The Generosity Mindset™, can replace those self-limiting beliefs. The Generosity Mindset enables you to diagnose and communicate the value you deliver to clients and, in turn, more effectively price to receive a portion of that value.

Whether you’re a consultant, coach, marketing or branding professional, business advisor, attorney, CPA, or work in virtually any other professional services discipline, your content and technical expertise are not proprietary. What’s unique, though, is your experience and how you synthesize and deliver your knowledge. What’s special is your demeanor or the way you deal with your best-fit clients. What’s invaluable is how you deliver great value by guiding people through massive changes in their personal lives and in their businesses that bring them to a place they never thought possible.

The combination of all these elements is quite different for you compared to any other service provider in your industry. Therein lies your value, but it’s not the value you see. It’s the value your best-fit customers see in you.

If pricing your value feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar to you, this book will teach you why putting a price on the value your clients perceive and identify serves both them and you, and you’ll learn the factors involved in getting your price right.

The book is available at all major physical and online book retailers worldwide. Follow this link for further details.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

 

Tagged With: brand positioning, John Ray, positioning, professional services providers, solopreneurs, The Price and Value Journey, value, value conversation, value pricing

“It’s Too Expensive”

December 16, 2022 by John Ray

"It's Too Expensive"
North Fulton Studio
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"It's Too Expensive"

“It’s Too Expensive”

When a prospect tells you “it’s too expensive,” they’ve done you a favor:  they’re telling you that you haven’t had an effective value conversation.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] Hello again. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. “It’s too expensive.” How do you react when a prospect says this?

John Ray: [00:00:11] All of us are human, and the normal reactions might be to give up, get angry, get defensive. And, of course, let that imposter syndrome rear its ugly head. Don’t give in to any of these impulses. Instead, you should mentally thank that prospect for their response. They’ve given you valuable feedback, which prospects don’t always do. Often they’re too polite to tell you that.

John Ray: [00:00:42] Further, though, and more important, if you get this reaction, it’s almost always your fault. Well, why is that? It’s because you haven’t had an adequate value conversation. A conversation which helps you determine what the client values, what they hold dear. Because you don’t understand the client’s perception of value, you’ve been in the dark as you prepared your proposal.

John Ray: [00:01:07] And here’s another reason why if a client says you’re too expensive it might be your fault. You’re only offering one option. You haven’t taken advantage of what many professional services providers are able to do. Offer three options, optimally, which are crafted to respond to the client perception of value as revealed in that great value conversation that you should have had.

John Ray: [00:01:32] Offering only one option creates a fill or kill situation, one in which you are more likely to get a too expensive response. Or just as bad, the prospect immediately accepts your proposal quietly thinking that they can’t believe you’re offering so much for the stated services at the low price that you’re offering. Effective value conversations invariably help you avoid the “too expensive” response.

John Ray: [00:02:06] I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. Past episodes of this series can be found at pricevaluejourney.com or on your favorite podcast app. And if you’re not already a subscriber, I’d be honored if you would do that. You can also email me directly, john@johnray.co. And big news, I’ve got a book coming in 2023, and I would love to tell you more about that if you’d like to be in touch. Thank you.

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,600 podcast episodes.

Coming in 2023:  A New Book!

John’s working on a book that will be released in 2023. The book covers topics like value and adopting a mindset of value, pricing your services more effectively, proposals, and essential elements of growing your business. For more information, contact John below.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: client perception, expensive, John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, prospect, solopreneurs, value, value conversation, value pricing

The Tale of the Impatient Garage Door Repairman

December 12, 2022 by John Ray

The Tale of the Impatient Garage Door Repairman
North Fulton Studio
The Tale of the Impatient Garage Door Repairman
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The Tale of the Impatient Garage Door Repairman

The Tale of the Impatient Garage Door Repairman

As a professional services provider, your pricing depends on the conversations you’re willing to have with prospective clients. This cautionary tale of the impatient garage door repairman illustrates the cost of not having a value conversation.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] Hello. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. The Tail of the Impatient Garage Door Repairman.

John Ray: [00:00:09] One morning several years ago, I woke up, sleepily took care of our morning potty time for our dogs. And then, when I brought in the last one and lowered the garage door, disaster struck. As the garage door lowered, it crinkled. And my wife couldn’t get out of the garage. Fortunately, though, I was parked outside and can take her to the school where she teaches.

John Ray: [00:00:35] On the drive over, she asked who I was going to call about our problem. I have no idea, I told her, but I’ll work it all out. Well, after I dropped her off, I went straight to my desk and started my work. I could deal with that garage door stuff later, right? Well, a few hours went by and my wife called me during her lunchtime planning period to check on how that garage door repair was going. I’m working on it, I told her. Well, Dr. Ray has a keen nose for bull. You need to know, she said, that I’m not spending the night in that house if that garage door is not fixed.

John Ray: [00:01:19] Well, my priorities, you might say, had suddenly been realigned. I had to get on the stick and make something happen. I didn’t have a contact among garage door installers, so I did what most people do in such circumstances, I went online. I looked for a garage door expert with what seemed to be satisfactory and legitimately honest reviews. I found a nearby provider who seemed pretty good and I gave him a call. I described the problem, gave him my addres, and texted him pictures of the door along with measurements of the door panels.

John Ray: [00:01:59] After a few minutes, he called me back, I’ve got the panels we need to replace the door, he said, are you open for me to come out there this afternoon? Yes, I said. And I was trying to damper my excitement when he said that. Well, normally, he said, I would charge $1,100 or so. But if you’ll pay cash, I’ll charge you $800. I immediately responded, “Get over here, man. I’m headed to the ATM.” So, I get a sizable discount for paying in cash and I’m not going to be in trouble with my wife, I felt like I was at the casino and three cherries had just come up on the slot machine.

John Ray: [00:02:37] I had no idea when I made the call what a garage door replacement like this should cost. I had visions of four figures dancing in my head before this conversation, so that’s what I was braced for. In his impatience to get this job and seemingly, also, to avoid taxes by receiving cash, my garage door repairman screwed up.

John Ray: [00:03:01] He was focused only on the job at hand, not the why of the job. He didn’t have a value conversation with me, his client. He never asked me any questions that would have revealed my sense of urgency and what I valued. He could have asked questions such as, “Well, what happened and when? Do you know why it happened? Was there anything unusual happening prior to the problem? What do you have in mind to replace the door? Any upcoming outside house painting or remodeling projects you have? When was the house built? Any issues with the garage door motor itself? How many cars are parked in the garage?”

John Ray: [00:03:47] You see the point? He could have then said after all that questioning, “Hey, my crews are pretty busy right now and we’re more than halfway through the day today, when did you need to have the work completed?” At some point in this conversation, I would have revealed the big problem, which had little to do with the garage door itself. It was important to my wife that this job be completed that day and, therefore, it was important to me.

John Ray: [00:04:17] I would have understood that I’m calling him in the middle of the day hoping he could get my replacement done by day’s end, if he told me that he had a rush charge, but that he could get out there that afternoon, I would have paid – I don’t know – $1,500, $2,000. I don’t know what I would have paid. But I felt like I’d drawn the get out of jail free card to only pay $800.

John Ray: [00:04:42] In the services business, home professional or otherwise, the price you ultimately receive is based in part on your willingness to have a value conversation which taps into the hopes, fears, dreams, and other emotions which are bubbling up inside of your client. But you won’t know those unless you ask.

John Ray: [00:05:04] And your impatience can cost you a lot of money like it did my garage door repairman. And you might be, like I imagine he could be, wondering why you’re working so hard for so little on the bottom line.

John Ray: [00:05:19] Thanks for joining me on The Price and Value Journey. Past episodes of this series can be found at pricevaluejourney.com or on your favorite podcast app. I’d be honored if you’d subscribe to the show, if you’re not already. And feel free to send me an email, john@johnray.co.

John Ray: [00:05:40] And, hey, some big news, in 2023, I’ll be releasing a book, so if you want more information on that, feel free to connect with me. You can send an email or connect with me on LinkedIn. johnray1 is my handle on LinkedIn. Thanks for joining me.

  

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,600 podcast episodes.

Coming in 2023:  A New Book!

John’s working on a book that will be released in 2023. The book covers topics like value and adopting a mindset of value, pricing your services more effectively, proposals, and essential elements of growing your business. For more information, connect with John below.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: John Ray, professional services, professional services providers, solopreneurs, The Price and Value Journey, value, value conversation, value pricing

Why Clients Value Us: A Live Example

April 25, 2022 by John Ray

Why Clients Value Us: A Live Example
North Fulton Studio
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Why Clients Value Us: A Live Example

Why Clients Value Us:  A Live Example

An answer to a question I asked a podcast guest is an example of why clients value us as professional services providers. The answers they give to that question might surprise us. (The complete podcast episode from which the audio clip we used is taken can be found here.)

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] Hello again. I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey.

John Ray: [00:00:05] One of the podcasts that I produce is Business Beat. It’s sponsored by top 50 CPA firm, Frazier & Deeter. Roger Lusby, who’s the partner in charge of the Alpharetta office of Frazier & Deeter hosts the show and I sit alongside him. Now, a few years ago, we had a show in which Roger invited a long-term client of the firm, Chuck Walker, to talk about the growth and success of his company, Chemlink Laboratories. Near the end of the interview, I asked Chuck about his relationship with Frazier & Deeter and how that relationship had contributed to his firm’s success. Listen in.

John Ray: [00:00:47] During this time, you’ve had this long-term relationship with Roger and Matt, other folks at Frazier and Deeter, so you talked about the value of having great outside counselors and advisors like Frazier & Deeter, talk a little more specifically about how they’ve been helpful to you.

Chuck Walker: [00:01:06] Well, I’ve been with Roger since well before 1984.

Roger Lusby: [00:01:12] A long time.

Chuck Walker: [00:01:12] Long time before that, ’81, ’82. And what I found in dealing with Roger, we’re both like younger then, number 1, but we had a lot of things in common. We both love baseball. We both like to talk sports. But then, as you could tell by hearing Roger on the phone, very calming effect. So, you would call Roger, “My gosh, we’re here”. “Okay, Chuck. Okay, Chuck, let’s walk through this step by step, by step.” And of course, he knew a lot more than I did about what the problems would be and how we would handle them, and that’s how it grew over the years. And then, in fact, Roger took me to the sixth game of the 1995 World Series, and we sat there, we had dinner, we watched the Braves win, they were only-

Roger Lusby: [00:01:59] Tom Glavine, one hitter.

Chuck Walker: [00:01:59] Tom Glavine and just as he hit the homerun. But sometimes, you talk to Roger, if you don’t even come away with anything, when you get off the phone, you’ve calmed down, but in most instances, you come away with things, you come away with solutions, or “Here’s what I suggest”, and that’s been a huge, huge help asset.

Roger Lusby: [00:02:19] Well, thank you, Chuck.

John Ray: [00:02:22] Okay. So, what were the first couple of things that came to mind for Chuck as he thought about his relationship with Roger and Frazier & Deeter? What were the first couple of things that came up in the heat of the moment? Well, Chuck could have mentioned Roger’s degrees or his many years of experience. He could have mentioned the firm’s many areas of expertise which he can draw on. He could have mentioned the fact that Frazier & Deeter is a Top 50 accounting firm. But none of those attributes got mentioned. He did get around to mentioning the solutions and the outcomes that Roger and his firm helped deliver for him, but that’s not how he led off the answer to my question. What was the first answer? It was baseball.

John Ray: [00:03:12] Well, with that answer, I think what Chuck was addressing was the relationship he enjoyed with Roger. Now, I suspect that for Chuck, the mutual love of baseball that he referenced was a symbol of a personal bond, which the two of them had developed. It was more than just going to the World Series together. It was that their conversations and times that they had shared at baseball games, and maybe on the phone talking about baseball, and how the Braves were doing, they were just a reminder for Chuck of the human traits that Roger has, which appealed to Chuck and attracted Chuck to Roger in the first place.

John Ray: [00:03:56] The second thing that Chuck mentioned was Roger’s calming effect, as he called it, when Chuck would call Roger about a business problem. As Chuck clearly indicated, sure, he valued Roger’s advice and counsel over the years, but there was something more. He started by talking about how Roger delivered that advice, and how that delivery, the calming effect of it, was important to him.

John Ray: [00:04:27] This conversation is an illustration of how our clients and prospects have intangible reasons for selecting us initially and for continuing to do business with us. Those intangibles have nothing to do with our degree, certifications, experience, all the things we might default to when we think about why our clients not only buy from us, but continue to do so over the years.

John Ray: [00:04:53] Here’s another thing to remember. Just as every client is unique, client intangibles are unique. To use this example, the intangibles which Chuck mentions for working with Roger, baseball or calming effect, might be totally different than what other clients of Roger’s might mention. So, understanding why a particular client might be interested in doing business with us, might hire us, or might continue the professional relationship, and in turn, justifies the price that they’re willing to pay for our services, all of that requires more than just judging their demographic, or psychographic, or what avatar they are, or some other commoditizing feature that marketers come up with.

John Ray: [00:05:43] That’s where the value conversation comes in, digging into in the initial buying conversation, and then over the years, as the relationship grows and develops, why our clients not only start doing business with us, pay the price they pay, but continue to do so. Digging into those hopes, fears, dreams, those intangibles that drive why the relationship begins and why it continues.

John Ray: [00:06:15] I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. Past episodes of this series can be found on your favorite podcast app or at pricevaluejourney.com. If you’d like to connect with me directly, you can send me a note, john@johnray.co. Thank you for joining me.

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,300 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services providers, selling professional services, solopreneurs, The Price and Value Journey, value, value conversation

Selling to Your Own Wallet

March 2, 2022 by John Ray

Selling to Your Own Wallet
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Selling to Your Own Wallet

Selling to Your Own Wallet

“They’ll never pay that much.” If you’ve had that thought as you think about how to price a client engagement or project, then you may be guilty of selling to your own wallet. John Ray discusses the phenomenon, why it happens, and how to address it. The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] And hello again. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. Once I was advising a professional services provider on engagement options that she was preparing to deliver to a prospect. We talked about the client’s needs, wants, and values, the three options that made sense in light of what it seemed the client valued, and the pricing of those options.

John Ray: [00:00:25] The pricing of all three of these options were significantly higher than what she had originally envisioned and well beyond what she’d ever received for any client engagement. “I’m not sure I would pay that much,” she said. “Who cares what you think?” I replied, “You’re not the one writing the check.”

John Ray: [00:00:48] The point I was making was that she was guilty of selling to her own wallet. As it turns out, she hadn’t had a deep enough value conversation with the prospect. Selling to your own wallet invariably occurs when you haven’t had that effective value conversation with the client. And as we went along, that’s what my client and I realized about her experience.

John Ray: [00:01:15] Your conversations have turned more on what the prospect has asked for, your service and how you do what you do. When it comes time to put together engagement options, then you find out that you don’t know that prospect as well as you’d like because you didn’t have the patience to ask friendly yet probing questions which reveal motivations, values, hopes, and fears of the client.

John Ray: [00:01:42] You haven’t discovered, for example, that if this guy doesn’t complete the project you’ve been discussing with him very soon, his wife may cause him to end up on a missing persons list. This situation actually happened with me, establishing value in the mind of that prospect and justifying my pricing was clear, but only because I’d had the patience enough to diagnose the domestic motivation, you might say, behind his desire for my services.

John Ray: [00:02:13] Selling to your own wallet often happens, as was also the case here, when you are proposing prices much higher than you’ve ever received for your services. It’s the professional services provider’s version of the high wire. And the higher the price points, the further off the ground that wire seems. You’re standing on the ledge about to walk out on the high wire and your legs are frozen. The wind is kicking up and your stomach is churning. You’re deathly afraid of that first step you’ll take when you slide those engagement options across the table to the prospect. You’re afraid the shock of their reaction to your pricing will blow you right off the wire.

John Ray: [00:03:00] Here’s the power of an effective value conversation. It arms you with confidence. That tight rope feels like it’s only a foot off the ground. A fruitful value conversation enables you to keep subsequent discussions around price aligned with the clearly perceived value that the client has already disclosed to you that you’ve diagnosed and the two of you have discussed. It takes away that queasy feeling in your stomach. It also taps down the notion that you’re gouging someone.

John Ray: [00:03:39] When you utilize value pricing, you’re establishing the value profit, if you will, the excess of value the client receives over the price paid that the client will receive from your involvement. It’s clear both to the client and in your own mind that there’s a rationale for your price, which is very clear. You feel confident in the value of the work you’re doing and the client profits as well. That’s what it’s all about, right?

John Ray: [00:04:11] I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. You can find the episode archive of this series at pricevaluejourney.com You can connect with me by emailing john@johnray.co. Thank you for joining me.

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

 

Tagged With: engagement options, John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, proposals, selling to your own wallet, solopreneurs, value, value conversation

Julie Keyes, Poised for Exit Podcast

February 17, 2022 by John Ray

Julie Keyes, Poised for Exit Podcast
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Julie Keyes, Poised for Exit PodcastJulie Keyes, Poised for Exit Podcast

My friend Julie Keyes is an exit planning expert based in the Twin Cities area. In an episode titled “Your Price is Too Low,” Julie interviewed me on her Poised for Exit podcast about pricing for professional services providers. We chatted about why I use the word “journey,” imposter syndrome, conducting value conversations with clients, why it’s vital to offer options, and much more. The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] Hello, I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. I was honored to be invited to join my friend, Julie Keyes, on her Poised for Exit Podcast to chat about pricing for professional services providers. We chatted about why I use the word journey in the Price and Value Journey. We talked about imposter syndrome, conducting value conversations with clients, why it’s vital to offer options and more. I’m grateful to Julie for inviting me on her show. Now, here’s our conversation.

Julie Keyes: [00:00:32] Ladies and gentlemen, we are here today with John Ray, who is a consultant, speaker and radio host of RadioX. John, welcome to Poised for Exit.

John Ray: [00:00:43] Hey, Julie. It’s great to be here and I’m just so honored to be on your show. I’ve listened to it a lot, and you’ve got great guests, and I’m delighted and humbled to be part of that pantheon you’ve had. So, congratulations on that.

Julie Keyes: [00:00:55] Well. Thank you. Well, I have to say likewise, you’ve had a lot of really great content on your show too, and I hope to get into some of that today because our listeners are really going to be interested in what you have to say because so many of us, of the people who are in our listening audience would want to know and hear a lot of the advice that you’re going to dispense for us today. So, thank you for being on the show. And it took us a while to get you here. You’re a busy guy, and I’m a busy gal, and oh my gosh. But thank you for your patience.

John Ray: [00:01:26] Absolutely.

Julie Keyes: [00:01:26] And yeah. So, I’m really looking forward to this interview. Thanks for joining us today. Let’s just jump right in. I’d like to talk with you about the work that you do in pricing and helping professionals price their services because I know that there are a lot of advisors out there who are not pricing properly regardless of their discipline. And I’m sure you see it all the time because it’s the work that you do. So, how did you get into that and why?

John Ray: [00:01:53] Well, because I wasn’t doing it right, right?

Julie Keyes: [00:01:57] I’m sure, yeah.

John Ray: [00:01:58] I mean, I’ve got a whole drawer full of t-shirts about mistakes in pricing. And you know, I did not learn pricing, and pricing strategies, and value and how to discern value. I didn’t learn any of that in business education and my career. You know, the last statistic I saw, it was like, I believe it was five percent of business schools in this country actually have a course, a course, any course on pricing.

Julie Keyes: [00:02:34] Wow.

John Ray: [00:02:34] So, if you’re educated, come out with your MBA, you don’t have great education on pricing or maybe any. So, you learn the wrong thing. You learn to do market surveys, or you just do it by the seat of your pants or what have you, and you went, “That’s wrong.” And so, I made a lot of those mistakes and I had to fix that. And so, I had to do a lot of this work on my own. And I saw this in my clients. And I was so passionate about it after a time. It’s like, “I see this over and over and over again. I want to help in this regard.”

Julie Keyes: [00:03:19] And that is — boy, you hit the nail on the head there. When I think about pricing and conversations that I’ve had – and it’s not my specialty right – but I have made some recommendations to clients that they need to adjust their pricing. And so many times you ask, “When was the last time you had a pricing adjustment?” and they’ll say, “Oh, three years ago. Four years ago.” Yeah.

John Ray: [00:03:42] Yeah.

Julie Keyes: [00:03:42] And I think, you know, with the way things are now, I think we really need to be cognizant of that. But it’s amazing to me that the schools aren’t actually teaching it. So, what are they teaching? Are they teaching people to just follow the competition around and price according to what they’re doing?

John Ray: [00:03:56] Well, to be fair, I mean, this is a relatively newer discipline, not how to price, but the philosophy behind it because so much of pricing is really tied up in behavioral economics. And that’s a relatively new field, just a few decades old. And so, you really have to get into behavioral economics to properly price, right. And so, I think that’s the issue of it all. But what’s at stake here is that pricing is the fastest way to change your bottomline. Now, this is an accounting fact. They teach you that in accounting. You know, it’s faster than improving your marketing or getting more clients or anything. This is an accounting fact. It’s not up for argument. So, if you can just work on your pricing, you will dramatically change the trajectory of your business.

Julie Keyes: [00:04:59] And probably have more fun and work fewer hours too, right?

John Ray: [00:05:03] Getting the whole idea

Julie Keyes: [00:05:05] And we’re going to get to a good story in a little bit about that. I know we are. So, I know that the name of your show is The Price and Value Journey, and I love that. But speak to me about journey. Why did you call it The Price and Value Journey?

John Ray: [00:05:20] Well, I guess there’s three elements to that. Price is obviously one. Value, let’s get to that real quick. So, this is about value that is perceived by our clients, right? This is not about value that we perceive. It’s not about what we think we’re worth, even though we’re worth a lot, right? You’re worth a lot, I’m worth a lot. Our listeners, the work they do is fantastic worth. It’s what our clients perceive, and how we get to that, and how we can price relative to the value that they perceive.

And then, journey is that we’re on a journey of trying to get this right. I mean, give yourself grace because the most common thing that happens when I work with a client on their practice and their pricing is, “Wow, I can’t believe I did that,” and as we talk and they learn, they just beat themselves up. “I don’t know how I’m going to do all this.” Well, here’s the point – it’s a journey, okay. You’re not going to fix all this today, or tomorrow, or next week or even next year. It takes some time to work these things through. And so, give yourself grace.

And pricing is an art; it’s not a science. So, that’s the other piece of it. You can’t look up in the book and find out all the answers. You have to do some trial and error and testing to get from here to there. And so, that’s a journey.

Julie Keyes: [00:06:54] And I love that you said you’ve got to give yourself permission because I think that we, as advisors, at least, when I first started exit planning six or seven years ago, I just thought that I had to get it right right out of the gate. And like you said, it takes a while. You have to figure out. I don’t know. It is definitely a journey. I guess that’s why I wanted to ask you about it because I don’t think that a lot of people who are pricing professional services view it that way. I think that they feel pressured to make sure that they get it right. And unfortunately, I think a lot of them are still charging by the hour. And I know you don’t believe in that, either. Neither do I. That could be another whole show, John, right?

John Ray: [00:07:34] How long is this show, Julie?

Julie Keyes: [00:07:38] Yeah, yeah.

John Ray: [00:07:39] Well, yeah. Well, I mean, you know, a couple of things there. I mean, yeah, pricing by the hour, I call it a red flag of poor pricing. You know, if you’re pricing by the hour, your price is too low. That’s just by definition. And again, there’s a whole explanation behind that, and we can address that some other time. But you know, the other thing is, is that to get from here to there – and by here, I mean struggling and stuck in your practice, and a lot of people are struggling and stuck, or they’re working too hard for too little money, and that’s kind of struggling and stuck to. And if any of those things describe you, pricing is probably a problem. But to get from here to there, it takes a shift in mindset. It takes a lot of deep perspective change about where value is, and how value is perceived, and how you look at your practice and how the clients look at your practice. And that takes some time. It takes some adjustment.

Julie Keyes: [00:08:47] It does. And self-awareness, I would think, would be a part of that conversation too, right? Figuring out like, why do I feel like I’m not worth a certain amount of money or why do I? And is that in line with what the client would really want or expect, right?

John Ray: [00:09:05] Oh boy. I think I heard the imposter syndrome get flopped up on the desk, yeah?

John Ray: [00:09:11] Yeah. That’s what we’re talking about, right?

Julie Keyes: [00:09:13] Yeah. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And I bet you deal with that all the time,

John Ray: [00:09:18] All the time. And you know, that’s a case where you’re spending with your own wallet. Nobody would pay that, right? Well, what you’re really saying is you don’t think you would because you don’t trust yourself. And I know that you, whoever you is, I know you do great work, but it’s not about you, it’s about what the client perceives.

Julie Keyes: [00:09:45] Yes.

John Ray: [00:09:45] So, let’s let the client decide how to spend the money instead of you.

Julie Keyes: [00:09:49] How do you figure that out?

John Ray: [00:09:50] Yeah.

Julie Keyes: [00:09:51] Sorry.

John Ray: [00:09:51] No, no. Instead of you selling to your own wallet is one way to put it.

Julie Keyes: [00:09:57] Yeah, that’s a cool concept. I mean, it’s a good way to look at it, [but how do you figure out what the client is actually perceiving? How do you determine that?

John Ray: [00:10:07] So, that’s a value conversation. And that’s not a term I came up with. It’s not a concept I came up with. You know, there’s some great work out there by people like Ron Baker who talk about having a value conversation with clients. And what that is is diving into their hopes, dreams, aspirations, all the intangibles that are behind the reason they picked up the phone to call you to begin with. See, when somebody calls Julie, lets say — can I use you as an example?

Julie Keyes: [00:10:42] Sure.

John Ray: [00:10:43] When when they call Julie to look for help with their exit planning, what are they looking for? There’s more to it than just the request, the tactic that they’re wanting help with, right? They’ve got a strategy. They want to exit their business in five years. Their spouse is all after them saying, “You’re spending way too much time in this business. You need to get out. It’s destroying your health,” or some other reason or set of reasons. Those are values. Those are client values. And so, what that means is it’s more what’s at stake when you counsel a client is more than just, “Oh, let’s do an exit plan,” right?

Julie Keyes: [00:11:32] Oh, yeah, yeah.

John Ray: [00:11:33] It’s about getting that person to a place where they’ve got a happier home life, their spouse, they can reconnect with their spouse, their health is better. Those are priceless values. And so, you price relative to just the plan, not just the things, the tactics that you help them with and the strategies you help them with, but the big picture intangibles that mean so much to them that are behind the request.

Julie Keyes: [00:12:03] Well, and don’t you also help your clients determine if and when pricing packages or levels make sense, so they’re not just quoting one price, but they’ve got different offerings at different levels. Let’s talk about that for a second.

John Ray: [00:12:19] Yeah, thank you. So, yeah. So, options are powerful. And there’s a reason why, you know, the car companies, for example, have a small compact car, they have a medium kind of offering, and then they have luxury offering. I mean, there’s a reason why there’s small, medium and large. The dominant one-

Julie Keyes: [00:12:46] Just like at the Dairy Queen, yeah.

John Ray: [00:12:48] Yeah, there are choices. Exactly, there are choices. And what that’s a nod to is the fact that we have different values for different products and services. So, let’s take coffee, for example. I mean, I’m a cheapskate when it comes to coffee, so I would prefer just to come to your office and drink your coffee. But if I have to, I’ll go get the dollar coffee at the gas station right? Then, there are some people that they want the Starbucks. They’re going to sit in line for the Starbucks. And then, the most expensive cup of coffee in the United States is $75. It’s served once a year in one sitting in one party, and it’s sold out. And these are people that highly value coffee. They think coffee is like wine.

Julie Keyes: [00:13:36] Wow.

Julie Keyes: [00:13:37] More power to them. I mean-

John Ray: [00:13:38] Sure, yeah,

Julie Keyes: [00:13:39] I’m not criticizing. It just shows different values. So-

John Ray: [00:13:42] Of course.

John Ray: [00:13:44] If you can offer different options for your services, then you’re more likely to hit people more how they might value you. And I promise you, your prices will go up by definition because most people are pricing based on the basic. Their price is not based on the dollar cup of coffee, and not on the premium.

Julie Keyes: [00:14:07] Right. And I think, like you said before, I think that people really do value the ability to make a choice, right?

John Ray: [00:14:19] Absolutely.

Julie Keyes: [00:14:19] And I saw on a show not too long ago where they were talking about how to place items on a menu at a restaurant, and the things that they want you to buy that are in the middle of the road, so to speak, is going to be right in the middle, right where your your line of vision is. So, beware the middle of the menu.

John Ray: [00:14:39] Yeah. Yeah, they’ve got a lot of little tricks on those restaurant menus, for sure.

Julie Keyes: [00:14:45] Well, we to have our own tactics, don’t we, John?

John Ray: [00:14:48] Absolutely. Absolutely.

Julie Keyes: [00:14:50] Yeah. So, let’s talk about a client or two. Could you share a story about not necessarily — well, you talked about struggling and stuck. So, you took them from struggling and stuck to happy and not working all the time.

John Ray: [00:15:08] Well, let’s talk about — I mean, a number I could point to, and some of them are humorous, some of them are sad actually, but let’s talk about some specific numbers because we were just talking about options. So, I worked with a consultant who I won’t mention what they do, but they had their thing, and it was kind of a one-time thing that they did for busy professionals, and they charged $800 for it. That was the only option. Well, you could look at it from the outside and see there was a lot more value than $800 to it. And once we got through talking through all that, what we decided was his base offering should be $1500, not $800. And we built on options from there. And it’s a good, better, best model.

Julie Keyes: [00:16:09] Of course.

John Ray: [00:16:10] Right?

Julie Keyes: [00:16:10] Got it.

John Ray: [00:16:11] So, better has a little bit more than good, and best has a little bit more than better, and best is you’re like premium velvet rope option. So, we got good to $1500, we got better at $3300 for his thing, and then best I can only get him to $5000. I told him it ought to be $10,000. But we could get him to $5000, and I figure we’ve done good enough job there.

Julie Keyes: [00:16:43] Wow.

John Ray: [00:16:43] Well, the first time he went and offered this, he called me back, and he was so excited. The client he offered those options to pick the middle option, which means that’s at $3300 versus $800. So, the better option. And that’s obviously about four times more revenue than he has received.

Julie Keyes: [00:17:12] He had to be cartwheeling then.

John Ray: [00:17:14] He was pretty happy, right?

Julie Keyes: [00:17:16] Right.

John Ray: [00:17:17] Think about this now[. There’s there’s a couple of things here. That’s three fewer leads he’s got to worry about converting.

Julie Keyes: [00:17:24] Oh, exactly. Yes.

John Ray: [00:17:26] So, suddenly, he’s got a lot more time on his hands to better serve that client. And here’s the most important part for me because I get this all the time from people about you’re just trying to ring people out, you know, ring clients out. That’s not the point here. The point is that’s serving clients better. The client picked what they wanted, so they received much more value than what he had been selling before.

Julie Keyes: [00:17:52] Exactly.

John Ray: [00:17:53] Yeah. So, they picked that because they saw value in it. And so, the client was better off. The consultant was better off.

Julie Keyes: [00:18:01] Everybody wins.

John Ray: [00:18:02] Everybody wins. That’s the whole idea here.

Julie Keyes: [00:18:04] Yeah. And that’s really the way things can be more sustainable, right, is if everybody is going to win. So, well, one thing I wanted to touch on really quick that you talked about in one of your recent shows was on consistency. And so, let’s briefly discuss consistency. Obviously, we could go on for that personal life, business life. We could go on for a long time about that. But as it relates to your work, let’s talk about that for a little bit.

John Ray: [00:18:35] Sure. So, consistency, I mean, everybody intellectually agrees that consistency is important. You know, it’s another thing to be consistent in a way that you’re building trust with clients. So, you know, there’s a lot of aspects to this. One is to be consistent about all the right things that clients care about. You know, not about maybe what you think is important, but what the client thinks is important. So, it’s about understanding what their values are, right? I mean, if you’re not delivering that report they’re looking for every month, but you haven’t asked about what report they’re looking for, you know, that’s kind of on you. You’ve got to figure that out, so you can be consistent about the things that are important to them in their minds.

You know, consistency is one of those things that sometimes I think we as professional services providers, particularly smaller firms, certainly solopreneurs have a problem delegating, right? So, if you don’t have a VA, go get a VA. Spend the money. I’m sorry. Go spend the money and get a VA that will help you be consistent, and you can download some of this too, right? They can help you with that.

Julie Keyes: [00:19:57] Yes.

John Ray: [00:19:57] Or if you’ve got a VA, and they’re not doing the job, get another one. Or maybe you need to reposition your people if you’ve got employees, but they can help the overall consistency of the firm and how it delivers what it delivers. So, this is where automation can help you. This is where systems can help you. This is where having a operations manual can help you. I dare say that most professional services practices that are small solopreneurs and medium or small firms do not have an operations manual.

Julie Keyes: [00:20:38] So, if something happened to them, there’s no way anybody could continue the business because they wouldn’t know what to do. Yeah, yeah.

John Ray: [00:20:45] Well, that is certainly true, but the fact that you haven’t done that means you haven’t sit and thought about your process very much. And just like how writing helps you clarify your thoughts about something, you know about this because you do a lot of writing, if you do an operations manual and a process flow, it helps you think more clearly about what’s going on in your practice and how things happen, right? And you can remove some of those frictions that make you inconsistent.

Julie Keyes: [00:21:17] Great advice. Great advice. I’m going to do that myself. I have some processes documented but some, I don’t. And much of that I was forced to do when I hired my first VA. And so, for those of you out there who don’t have a VA, this will force you to articulate your processes in writing, for sure.

John Ray: [00:21:38] There you go.

Julie Keyes: [00:21:38] So, give us a couple action items, John. We could keep going, but we got to wrap up. So, what are a couple of things that our listeners could do right away that would make a difference?

John Ray: [00:21:48] Go raise your price. So-

Julie Keyes: [00:21:48] Easy, raise your price.

John Ray: [00:21:53] Well, here’s how I’ll make it easy. I mean, if you haven’t raised your prices in — certainly, the person you described, the situation you described where they didn’t raise their prices in three or four years, I mean, look what’s happening with inflation. Raise your prices, please. So, you don’t have to go out and raise your price by 50 percent tomorrow, but raise your price. And in a one-percent price increase, nobody will even notice. I mean, they won’t care. But just go raise your price. And do it for new clients. Just do it for new clients that you get. You don’t have to worry even about your legacy book, necessarily, although you need to get into that, but raise your pricing for new clients. Start thinking about options. How can I deliver options? What’s my good, and better and best? And why am I delivering the best that I’ve got the velvet rope treatment for every client? Why am I doing that? Because if you’re doing that, you’ve got nice clients and good clients, but they’re not really paying you for the velvet rope treatment, but you’re giving it to them.

Julie Keyes: [00:23:13] Yes.

John Ray: [00:23:14] So, develop options in your practice.

Julie Keyes: [00:23:18] Wonderful advice. What’s the best way for our listeners to reach you? Because I’m sure they’re going to want to learn more?

John Ray: [00:23:24] Sure, folks can go to my website, johnray.co. You can email me John@JohnRay.co. If you want to listen to my show on The Price and Value Journey, you can go to priceandvaluejourney.com to see the show archive and of course, on your favorite podcast app, as the old saying goes.

Julie Keyes: [00:23:53] Fantastic. And we will have all of that in the show notes, John. Thank you so much for being on the show today. Wonderful advice. I can’t wait to hear what our listeners have to say about it. And for you, our listeners, you will be able to find this, of course, and all our other episodes on the Poised for Exit website available for download at any time. Thanks for joining us, and please join us again next time.

John Ray: [00:24:15] There you have it. I’d like to thank Julie Keyes so much for her kind invitation to join her as a guest on Poised for Exit. If your professional services practice has a bent toward assisting business owners with exit planning or you’re actually one of those business owners looking ahead to an exit, you need to know Julie and subscribe to her podcast. One thing I love about her is that she’s been a founder and operator of several companies, and she’s actually been through her own business exit. In other words, she’s got hands on expertise and experience to bring to the table for her exit planning clients.

I’m a subscriber and a regular listener to her show, and it’s terrific. You can find the show on your preferred podcast app, of course, but if you go to PoisedForExit.com, you’ll find not only past editions of the show, but a ton of great resources, including Julie’s book also titled Poised for Exit. There’s a ton of resources and information about Julie’s work at her website, KeyeStrategies.com. That’s KeyeStrategies.com. If you want to get in touch with Julie directly, email her at Julie@KeyeStrategies.com. Again, that’s KeyeStrategies.com. Thanks again to Julie for having me on her show. And thank you for listening to this edition of The Price and Value Journey.

  

Julie Keyes, Founder and President, KeyeStrategies, and Host of Poised for Exit

Julie Keyes
Julie Keyes, Founder and President, KeyeStrategies, and Host of Poised for Exit.

Julie Keyes is the founder and owner of KeyeStrategies, LLC in Minneapolis, MN, specializing in exit and transition consulting for business owners of lower middle-market companies. Julie has been an entrepreneur most of her life. As the founder and operator of several companies, she understands owner motivations and the balancing act they require to work both ‘in’ and ‘on’ the business.

Julie is a Certified Exit Planning Advisor and Value Growth Advisor. She works with business owners who seek to understand and maximize their exit and critical transition options. She founded the Exit Planning Institute Twin Cities Metro Area Chapter in 2016, serving as president until 2020, and is a faculty member for their CEPA program. In addition, Julie was awarded EPI’s 2017 “Leader of Year”.

Julie’s first book, Poised for Exit, helps owners of privately held companies navigate the process of business exit. Her weekly podcast, of the same name, provides content relevant to business owners and advisors alike and can be found on all major podcast platforms.

LinkedIn | Twitter | Poised for Exit

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: exit planning, imposter syndrome, John Ray, Julie Keyes, KeyeStrategies, offering options, options, Poised for Exit, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, solopreneurs, value, value conversation

Should I Price My Services Lower When I’m First Starting Out?

January 31, 2022 by John Ray

When Starting Out
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Should I Price My Services Lower When I'm First Starting Out?
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When Starting Out

Should I Price My Services Lower When I’m First Starting Out?

I recently received this question from a professional services provider who was just starting out in their practice, and barely had dry ink on their business cards. The premise behind their question was that they are new in business and want to attract clients to “get going.” Here’s a high-level version of a more specific answer I gave them. (In a word, the answer is no.) The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

 

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] And hello, I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. I recently received a question that was along the lines of, Should I price my services lower when I’m starting out? I get this question a lot from new professional services providers, ones that have just started their practice.

John Ray: [00:00:18] It’s an understandable question, but it comes from a faulty assumption. The premise is that lower prices attract customers, and that’s an understandable misconception. It’s one I labored with when I started out. That conception, that idea is wrong.

John Ray: [00:00:38] A couple things here. One is that prices are marketing signals. In the absence of any other indicator, a price is a marketing signal. For example, if I were to offer you a Lexus for $2,000, what would you think? It’s too good to be true, right? That’s part of the problem with pricing in a way that is supposed to be promotional, sometimes it actually drives clients away.

John Ray: [00:01:04] Now, let’s call something else out though. Part of the problem with professional services providers starting out is both fear and confidence. We are afraid and insecure in thinking a buyer will look at us and question our inexperience in the business. The answer to the problem is focusing on the client, discussing and understanding their problems in depth. What is the scope of the issues that their problems are causing? What will the client be able to do, whether it’s greater sales, lower expenses, less aggravation, a better vacation because the problem gets solved? What’s the cost of doing nothing?

John Ray: [00:01:48] You see, questions like this are a value conversation. And a value conversation is a dialogue with a customer which helps ferret out what the solution to their problem is worth to them. When you have value conversations with clients, you’re shifting everything. The comparison is less about price relative to, well, in this case, you’re supposed lack of experience or your newness in business.

John Ray: [00:02:17] Instead, the comparison becomes more in the minds of that client about price relative to the value of the solution. Once you’ve had a thorough value conversation, you may find that you’re not a great fit for this client. That what they really need is something you can’t provide. If so, you’ve done both them and you a favor.

John Ray: [00:02:42] But if you think you can solve the client’s problems, craft options for working together. Offer a good, better, best set of options. The good option should be your very basic – we’ll call it – compact car offering priced at more than what your gut tells you it should be. The best option should be your luxury solution to the problem when you know you can deliver with a price you think is crazy high.

John Ray: [00:03:12] Now, if you offer options after having a deep dive value conversation, the discussion with that client becomes more about the ways and terms to work with you as opposed to your time in business, your experience, what have you. Now, there’s a lot of detail underneath this answer, but that’s the way I answered this particular question on how should I price when I first start out. Have a value conversation, offer options.

John Ray: [00:03:46] I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. If you’d like to give me a question that I can answer here on this podcast, I’m happy to receive it. Just email me, john@johnray.co. Thank you for joining me.

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: confidence, fear, John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, starting a business, starting out, value, value conversation

“What I’m Worth”

January 25, 2022 by John Ray

What I'm Worth
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What I'm Worth“What I’m Worth”

“I should get paid what I’m worth.” For professional services providers, what we need or think we deserve is irrelevant. Here’s a story that illustrates the way we achieve better pricing, and it involves a value conversation. The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] And hello again. I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. “What I’m worth. I should get paid what I’m worth.” I hear this sentiment and variations on it from professional services providers whom I speak to about their pricing. What I’m worth is dangerous language for a B2B services provider. You see, what I’m worth in isolation can easily get turned into what I need or what I deserve. At an extreme, what I’m worth can justify taking advantage of people.

John Ray: [00:00:40] What you need or think you deserve is irrelevant, certainly to the client, and that’s who pays your fee. What’s relevant is how clients valued the solutions you provide to their problems, their perception of that value. Better pricing for your services starts with solutions, solutions rooted in the value clients derive from the work you do. And that value, by the way, is not just rational. The value customers perceive always involves emotions.

John Ray: [00:01:17] Recently, I had a conversation with an entrepreneur whose business, while growing, has gnawing problems under the surface. Her problems have been causing her to lose focus and sleep. “What would it mean,” I ask her, “to have these problems resolved? All this is obviously weighing on you.” She looked up in a way into someplace where she could see what her business and her life might look like with solutions to the problems that she had outlined. A wave of relief swept across her face. “Wow. I’d be a lot less stressed. I wouldn’t feel bogged down anymore. I’d have the freedom to make this business a lot larger.” I’ll let that vision linger for a moment, and then I asked, “What’s that worth to you?” “Wow,” she said, “I can’t even imagine.” “Well, that wasn’t quite true.”

John Ray: [00:02:21] As our conversation continued, she started formulating tangible answers to that question. And that’s where my value is rooted, not in what I need or what I think I’m worth. What I’m worth has nothing to do with it.

John Ray: [00:02:39] I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. If you’d like to know more, go to JohnRay.co, or if you’d like to send me a note, connect with me directly, email me John@JohnRay.co.

  

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, ray business advisors, solopreneurs, value conversation, value pricing, worth

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