Understanding Value
The ability to understand why someone chooses one option over another — why something feels worth paying for, how trust shapes that feeling, and why the cheapest option is rarely the one people actually want. When you understand this you stop competing on price and start competing on value.
What it looks like in real life
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Example 1 — Without this skill
A photographer charges less than every other photographer in their area. They believe the lower price is what will attract clients. When someone still hesitates or chooses a more expensive photographer they cannot understand why.
What they do not realize is that the lower price is actually working against them. It signals that the work might not be as good. The person considering them is not thinking this is a great deal. They are thinking why is this so cheap. The price created doubt instead of confidence.
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Example 2 — With this skill
A photographer at the same skill level charges more than the average in their area. They can explain clearly what the client will walk away with — not just photos but a specific experience, a specific outcome, and a guarantee of what the process will feel like. The higher price signals confidence in the work. The clarity about the outcome signals that the photographer understands what the client actually cares about.
The client pays more and feels better about the decision. Not because the photos are objectively better but because the value was communicated in a way that made the price feel justified.
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Most people who struggle with pricing are not undercharging. They are under-communicating value. The price is not the problem. The inability to make the outcome feel real and worth it is the problem.
When you understand value you stop trying to be the cheapest option and start making the case for why your option is the right one. That shift changes everything. Competing on price is a race to the bottom where the business with the lowest margins wins. Competing on value is a game where the business that communicates outcomes most clearly wins.
Understanding value also changes how you talk about what you do. Instead of listing what is included in the service you describe what changes for the person on the other side of it. That shift in framing is what makes someone feel like the price is worth it rather than something to negotiate down.
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You will know this skill is developing when people stop asking if you can do it cheaper. When the response to your price is that makes sense or that seems fair rather than can you lower it the value is being communicated clearly enough.
Another signal is when you can explain why your offer is worth what you charge without hesitating or apologizing. Confidence in the price comes from clarity about the value. When you fully understand what the outcome is worth to the person buying it the price becomes easy to stand behind.
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Confusing price and value. Price is the number. Value is what the person believes they are getting in exchange for that number. A high price with clearly communicated value feels fair. A low price with no communicated value still feels uncertain. They are not the same thing.
Describing features instead of outcomes. A feature is what the service includes. An outcome is what changes for the person receiving it. People do not buy features. They buy outcomes. The business that communicates outcomes most clearly wins the comparison even at a higher price.
Lowering the price when someone hesitates. Hesitation is almost never about the price being too high. It is almost always about the value not feeling certain enough to justify the commitment. Lowering the price does not solve that problem. Communicating the outcome more clearly does.
Believing that working harder justifies a higher price. Effort is invisible to the buyer. What they can see and feel is the outcome. A service that takes two hours but produces a result the client values highly is worth more than a service that takes twenty hours and produces a result they feel uncertain about. Price based on the value of the outcome not the cost of the effort.
The Exercise
Write down what you currently charge for your main offer.
Now write down what the person who buys it actually gets. Not what is included in the service. What changes for them. What becomes possible that was not possible before. What problem goes away. What outcome becomes real.
Ask yourself honestly whether the way you currently describe your offer communicates those outcomes clearly or whether it describes the process and the features instead.
Now rewrite how you describe your offer so that the outcome is the first and most prominent thing the person understands. The features and the process come after. The outcome comes first.
Show the rewritten description to someone who fits your ideal buyer profile. Ask them whether they understand what they would get and whether that feels worth what you charge. Their answer will tell you whether the value is being communicated clearly enough.
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