- Home
- Sales Strategy & GTM
- Pricing & Packaging
Pricing & packaging:
capture the value you create
Pricing is the fastest profit lever you own: no new headcount, no new product, no new pipeline. Yet most IT and SaaS companies set price by cost-plus or competitor-matching and discount their way to a close. This guide walks through value-based pricing, tiering and packaging, and the move off hourly billing - the levers that lift ACV and NRR without selling a single new logo.
A few points of price realization drops almost entirely to the bottom line
Win a new customer and you carry the full cost of acquisition. Ship a new feature and you carry the cost of building it. Raise realized price by a few points and there’s almost no marginal cost attached – it flows straight to profit. That’s what makes pricing the single most under-managed growth lever in most IT and SaaS companies.
And it compounds: better packaging lifts average deal size on every new deal, and a sound pricing model lifts expansion revenue across the whole base. Small change, broad and permanent effect.
WHY THIS MATTERS TO A CEO
Where a price increase lands
+5% price, same costs
Before
After
The whole price increase becomes profit – that’s the leverage.
THE TWO TRAPS
Hourly billing and reflex discounting are races to the bottom
Value-based pricing flips both: you anchor to the outcome you create, package so the buyer self-selects up, and stop competing on rate cards.
Trap 1 - billing by the hour
When you price by the hour, you’re paid for effort, not outcomes. Every competitor with a lower rate card looks identical to the buyer, efficiency gains reduce your revenue, and you’re forever defending your rate instead of your value.
Trap 2 - discounting to close
Every reflex discount trains buyers to wait for the next one, anchors the relationship on price, and quietly erodes margin deal by deal. Discounting feels like a tactic; it’s really a slow leak in the bottom line.
FIRST, THE MODEL
How you price decides what you're worth
Three common bases for setting price - most companies default to the first and leave money on the table.
Cost-plus
Add a margin to your cost. Simple, but it caps your price at what it costs you – and ignores what the outcome is worth to the buyer.
Competitor-based
Match or undercut the market. Safe-feeling, but it makes you a commodity and hands pricing power to whoever races lowest.
Value-based
Anchor to the outcome and ROI you deliver. Harder to build, but it’s the only model that captures the value you actually create.
THEN, THE PACKAGING
Good / better / best - built so buyers self-select up
Packaging is how you turn one price into a ladder. Done right, tiers make the buying decision easier and lift average deal size - the middle tier becomes the obvious choice, and the top tier raises the ceiling.
GOOD
Starter
Entry scope. Lands the relationship and creates the upgrade path.
BETTER
Growth
The anchor tier – most value for most buyers. Designed to be the obvious pick.
BEST
Enterprise
Raises the price ceiling and makes Growth look like the sensible choice.
The value metric matters most: price should scale with something the customer associates with value - seats, usage, outcomes - so growing accounts naturally pay more.
FOR IT & DEV SERVICES
Moving off the hourly treadmill
You don't jump from time-and-materials to outcome pricing overnight. There's a path, and each step decouples your revenue a little more from hours worked.
Each step decouples revenue from hours, and defends margin
Time & materials
paid for effort
Fixed-scope retainer
predictable, recurring
Value / outcome-based
priced to result
Productized offers
packaged, scalable
HOW WE BUILD IT
A pricing model grounded in willingness to pay
Willingness-to-pay analysis – Understand what your best customers actually value and would pay more for. Price follows value, not cost.
Competitive & value mapping – Map where you’re genuinely differentiated and where you’re commoditized, so you price from strength.
Model & metric design – Build the tiers, packaging, and the value metric that scales price with the value the customer receives.
Guardrails & rollout – Set discounting rules and approval gates, then plan migration for existing accounts and a new-deal playbook for the team.
WHAT WE BUILD
The pricing system, end to end
Value-Based Model
Pricing anchored to outcomes and ROI – not cost-plus or the market’s rate card.
Tiering & Packaging
Good/better/best structures and a value metric that lift average deal size.
Outcome Migration
For services: a path from hourly billing to fixed-scope and outcome-priced engagements.
Discounting Guardrails
Rules and approval gates that stop margin erosion and end the reflex discount.
Pricing is the fastest lever you have
A pricing change requires no new headcount, no new product, and no new pipeline, yet a few points of price realization drop almost entirely to the bottom line. For most IT and SaaS companies, pricing is the single most under-managed growth lever they own. Fix the model and the effect compounds across every new deal and the entire existing base.
WHY IT MATTERS
EXPLORE MORE
Related capabilities
Leaving money on the table with cost-plus pricing?
Start with a Sales Audit. We'll map where you're differentiated, find your real willingness-to-pay, and design pricing and packaging that capture the value you create.
Our Recent Blog Posts
Welcome to our blog, where we explore the latest trends and tips on building sales systems for IT and SaaS.
Finding the right Sales and Support specialists for your team is one of the most crucial responsibilities of every business
From 2020 to 2022, outbound sales (cold outreach via LinkedIn, email, and platforms like Upwork) were the primary lead generation
Stepping into a sales leadership role is an exhilarating yet demanding opportunity. The first 100 days are pivotal in shaping
Growing company revenue is challenging nowadays, so organizations constantly seek ways to improve their sales and marketing performance. One of
Alex is a newly hired Tech Sales Representative at a software development company that offers outsourcing services. He is skilled
Of course, the right sequence requires the founders or the CEO to start with a Corporate Strategy (nice if it





