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Why Is It So Hard to Tell Customers What You Charge
Playlist Confident Price Conversations: Best Episodes on Communicating Prices Episode 1020th May 2024 • The Pricing Lady • Janene Liston
00:00:00 00:18:34

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Welcome to Live With The Pricing Lady.

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I'm Janene, your hostess.

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This show is all about helping you build a sustainably profitable

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business while making an unbelievable impact on your world.

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Learn from my 20 years of experience and from my guests as we discuss their pricing

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challenges, failures, and successes.

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Pricing is a way of being or behaving in your business.

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My mission is to help you confidently charge for the value you deliver.

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Pricing is either hurting or helping your business.

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Let's make sure it's helping you reach your dreams.

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In this episode of Live with The Pricing Lady, we're talking about why you struggle

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to tell your clients what you charge.

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Sit back, relax and enjoy the episode.

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Today, we're here to talk about pricing.

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As usual when it comes to me, we're talking about pricing.

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Specifically, we're here to talk about why you struggle to tell

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people the Price of Your Offer.

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I'm assuming if you're here, it's something that you've

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struggled with yourself.

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Let me paint a scenario.

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You're talking to a client or a prospect.

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The conversation is going really well.

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It's flowing nicely.

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You can tell them what you do and talk about your offer and the benefits of it.

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But there's a point in that conversation where you start

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to get a little bit nervous.

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Maybe you start to lose your focus on the conversation because you know, at some

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point you're going to have to talk about the price and it doesn't feel good to you.

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It makes you nervous.

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Maybe you feel a little bit constricted in your chest or your

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breathing tightens, or maybe you feel a little Ill in your stomach.

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And then it comes to that point where you have to say the price

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and either you freeze or you stumble or you say something.

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You didn't mean to say.

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And the question is, does that sound familiar to you?

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I, I know I've struggled with that at times, even being The Pricing

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Lady, yes, there are always clients who want something bigger and

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something that I haven't done before.

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Of course I've been faced with that myself.

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And for me, I can fall back on My skills and competence in the area of pricing.

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But for a lot of people, they haven't built and nurtured those skills yet.

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For most people, what they understand about pricing is from

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what they know, being a consumer.

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And in the retail industry, specifically, there's lots of sales

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and things going on, and there's not a whole lot of conversation.

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You don't really learn the skills and tactics of pricing for your type of

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business, but you also don't necessarily learn how to have those conversations.

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That's part of what I want to talk to you about today.

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The first part is going to be about why we Get So Nervous.

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Then we're going to talk about what you can do with it because I want to make

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sure you leave here with some tips.

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Let's take a look at why we get so nervous or why do we freeze when this happens?

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One of the main reasons that people freeze is because they fear rejection.

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We've already decided in our mind that this person has to be a customer.

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This person has to buy something and oftentimes we don't even

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know anything about them enough yet to really make the decision.

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It's like when we go into a job interview thinking, We have to have

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that job, but we actually don't know anything more than what they've

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written on a page of paper, right?

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Or a website page, or when we date someone, we see someone across the room

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who's interesting, we start talking to them and we've already like gone 20 years

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ahead when we're old and retired, we assume that that's the person that we want

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without knowing anything more about them.

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And so we put all this power and onus on the other person, and then we get afraid.

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They're going to reject us.

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That's one of the main reasons that people freeze when it

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comes to talking about pricing.

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Is they're afraid of that rejection.

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Along with that comes a fear of being perceived as greedy.

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This is especially true for women.

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They tend to think that if they have too high a price, that everybody else will

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think they're greedy and then they want to go hide somewhere and not be seen.

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So there's also an element of that.

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Oftentimes the fear also will come from not really understanding why

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you have the price you have or not feeling confident about that price.

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If somebody just told you, well, you should charge 2,999

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for that, and you did it.

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You actually don't know anything more than that person told you that.

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You don't know why that price is right for your business.

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You don't know why that price is right for your customers, or

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even if it is in either case.

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So how can you feel confident about telling someone what you

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charge when you don't even really understand the why behind that price?

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It's almost impossible to feel that confidence.

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It could also be that you're not really certain about the value.

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Or how to communicate that value.

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So sometimes it's just a matter of you being better at

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communicating it, but other times you don't really understand it.

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And one of the key elements here, when we're talking about value is understanding

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the difference between benefits.

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of let's say functions or features or benefits of coaching and the value.

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Benefits are not value.

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Benefits actually are the step before value.

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So let me explain.

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Your mobile phone has lots of functions and features on it, lots

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of functionality on it, right?

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And they have lots of benefits, but not all of those

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benefits are important to you.

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So they're not of value to you.

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It's the same with any other offer.

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You know, somebody could say, well, buy this from me.

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I'll get you quicker results.

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Maybe I don't want quicker results.

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Being able to understand the value, but also communicate it effectively is

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also a reason that people feel nervous about telling people what they charge.

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There's two other things I'd like to mention in this.

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One is personal hangups around money, success, and worthiness.

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So that is another big reason.

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It's a little bit harder to, let's say, it takes a lot of work to be able

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to deal with some of those things.

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But when it comes to pricing, if you have the competence to know how to set

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your prices and how to communicate the value, you'll feel more confidence.

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Your money hangups might still influence you, but they won't influence you as much.

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If you've built that competence because you'll have more confidence already.

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While working on say money hangups is a, let's say a longer

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game, it takes more time to work your way through those things.

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You can counter that by understanding how to go about set prices so that you

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understand why those prices as well as understanding how to communicate value.

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And the last reason why you might struggle is due to simply lack of training when it

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comes to how to handle sales discussions.

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Now, most of us, a lot of women especially, don't like

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even talking about sales.

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Sales discussions, because it sounds icky.

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I know for me, for a lot of years, I had this image of a sleazy salesman with

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greasy hair and his shirt unbuttoned down to his navel, you know, trying

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to wheel and deal me something.

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Sales doesn't have to be like that.

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But if you don't have a process for how you're going to have that discussion,

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then of course, It's difficult for you to navigate and you'll feel that uncertainty.

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That is another reason why you might be stumbling.

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If those are different reasons, why what's helpful for you to do is try

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to think about, okay, which of those resonates with me the most, because

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then you can understand where to start doing something differently.

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Let's talk about some of the things that you can do.

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The first thing is when you're having, let's say that conversation with a

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potential client, your focus should be on the higher purpose of not selling

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them something, but on finding a solution that works for both of you.

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And sometimes the best solution for a potential client is to say, Hey,

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working with me or buying my product, isn't the right thing for you right

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now, but maybe I can recommend this.

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By doing that, you take some of the pressure off.

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If you're just focused on, I have to close the deal, I have to close

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the deal, I have to close the deal.

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You put so much pressure on yourself and the potential client that it builds

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that nervousness that you're feeling.

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Second, the way that you structure the conversation.

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A lot of times, what I try to do when I have these conversations with

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potential clients is I structure the conversation so that they ask me, how

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much I charge, rather than me having to just say it in the conversation.

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I feel by leading them towards asking me, they give me permission to say that.

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And that takes a little bit of the edge off.

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For some other people, they find it easier to talk about

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the investment upfront, first.

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Weed people out earlier.

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You need to structure your discussions in a way that works most effectively

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for you and for the types of clients or customers that you'll be working with.

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Another one is to understand why you're charging that price.

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So a lot of times I will meet with people and I'll ask them,

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okay, what do you charge for that?

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And they say, Oh, I charge, you know, 2000 francs or 2, 000.

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Okay.

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So why 2, 000?

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And then they go,

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especially if they're service based businesses, they usually

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go, well, everybody else was charging, between 2000 and 3000.

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So I thought I'd charge 10 percent less because I'm new.

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But you don't know if those other businesses that you compare to are

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successful or how successful, or if they're offering the same thing

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or something different, right?

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So you have to be careful about what you base your prices on because

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that can influence how confident you feel about saying the price.

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It's really important to build that competence of knowing how to choose

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or how to define the right prices for your business so that you have the

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confidence to be able to communicate it.

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Practice.

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This is a highly underused tactic in pricing, let's say, is to

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simply practice saying it out loud.

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Sit down with a trusted friend and say, ask me what I charge for this offer

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until I can say it, without laughing or without stumbling or without cringing

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or you know whatever it is that you do.

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And to say you know repeat it to me ask me what I charge.

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Ask me what I charge and you repeat and you go back and forth and then there's a

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point where you start to feel comfortable and it's really good then for the other

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person to then change the conversation.

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By the time you get comfortable, you might change the response to,

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wow, that's really expensive without telling you they're going to do it.

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Yeah.

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Or when they're going to do it and it throws you off your game.

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And then you practice the conversation up to that point

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until it feels comfortable for you.

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That practice can really help you.

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The last thing I want to share is you want to know how you're going to handle the no.

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I have a whole guide online that you can purchase about handling pricing

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objections, but one of the things that I want to share with you today

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is most people don't think about how they're going to handle that.

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So they leave it up to chance.

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When somebody gives them the feedback that's too expensive or that's not right

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for me right now, they go into panic mode.

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Some people will throw out discounts.

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Some people will try to, list all the reasons the person should buy.

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Their argumentations on why you should buy.

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And my best piece of advice here for one of the first things actually you

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should do, take a deep breath and then ask them oh, why do you say that?

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Because then you put the responsibility on them to explain to you where

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that's coming from so that you can understand what's really behind the no.

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Now that's just one part of what I talk about in the guide, but it

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is a very important part because usually people feel like they have to

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leap into action to counter the no.

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And I'm actually, Saying no, get curious about the no, and plan for that.

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Practice that as well, because it's probably not in your instinct right now.

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When someone does reject you and you will get those from time to time, it's probably

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not your first instinct to lean in and be curious about why they're saying no.

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But it's actually a much better response, both for them and for you.

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So those are first, the reasons why we get nervous.

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And second, some of the tips about what you can do about it.

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I left one off here because I actually mentioned it when I talked about

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why you get nervous, but let me just quickly mention that if you have Blocks

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around money, success, and worthiness.

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Of course, you want to work on identifying those so that you can do it differently.

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And an example I can give you as a client I had in the very early

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stages of my business, we were doing an exercise where I asked

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them to complete a bunch of prompts.

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And one of the prompts was pricing is.

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Later during the sharing, open sharing part of the conversation,

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he shared with us, quite, quite embarrassed, but he did it anyhow.

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He said, well, I wrote pricing is something I avoid.

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And in his business, he had to have conversations with customers.

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before they purchased anything, but he did everything in his power not to talk

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about what he charged his customers.

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You can imagine how his blocks around money and actually for him it was, had

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a lot to do with worthiness, hindered his ability to even close a deal

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because he wasn't even really willing to talk to people about the price.

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He went on a path of working through that so that he got more

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comfortable with pricing itself and having those conversations as well.

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That is what I wanted to share with you about why you might be struggling to

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talk about pricing with your customers.

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As you can imagine, there's a lot more to cover in this topic, but my goal

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for this episode was to do two things.

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First of all, to help you understand why you might be

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freezing up or struggling with.

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Telling customers what to charge, because once you can identify

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why you struggle so much.

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Then you know what to do to start correcting it.

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And I gave you a list of quite a few things, but they may not all apply to you.

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So take a look at that list and really think about what

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it is that's going on for you.

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And the second thing I wanted to achieve with this episode is I wanted to give you

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some ideas of some of the actions that you can take to start feeling more confident

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when it comes to having those discussions.

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I hope you've enjoyed this episode.

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We'll put a link to the guide in the show notes as well.

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So if you want to look more at how to handle pricing objectives more

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confidently, then you can grab yourself a copy of that as well.

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Have a great day and as always enjoy pricing everyone.

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Thank you for listening to this episode of Live with The Pricing Lady, the podcast.

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If you enjoyed the episode, rate, review, and subscribe to it, then share

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it with your friends and colleagues.

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I love hearing back from you listeners.

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If you've got comments, questions, or topic ideas, go on over to thepricinglady.

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com and contact me there.

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Not sure where to start when it comes to improving pricing and profits?

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At ThePricingLady.

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com you can download a copy of my Self Assessment Pricing Scorecard.

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Find out where it's going well and where you can begin improving.

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Or just simply book a discovery call with me.

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There we can discuss what's up with pricing in your business and

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how I might be able to help you.

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Thanks once again for joining.

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Remember, pricing can hurt or help your business.

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Let's make sure it's helping you reach your dreams.

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See you next time and as always, enjoy pricing.

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