Why Your Pricing Usually Isn’t the Problem — But Positioning Might Be

Nov 19, 2025

Why Your Pricing Usually Isn’t the Problem — But Positioning Might Be

Why Your Pricing Usually Isn’t the Problem — But Positioning Might Be

Why Your Pricing Usually Isn’t the Problem — But Positioning Might Be

When I start a free discovery call, I usually ask “what do you think the problem is” - and 50% of the time, the founder tells me “I think I’m charging too much”.

And it’s usually off the back of them just launching, slow sales and self-doubt. It’s a valid question but it’s usually the wrong one.

In the majority of cases, the issue isn’t the price point, it’s the lack of clarity around why the product costs what it does.

When a customer sees a price but doesn’t understand what they’re getting for it, they make assumptions. They may assume it’s overpriced. They assume it’s the same as cheaper alternatives. They assume it’s not for them. 

Not because it isn’t worth the money but because they’ve been given no reason to believe that it is.

And when that happens, the founder starts to panic - the founder questions whether to lower prices, add a discount, run a flash sale.

But discounting a product that’s already under-explained doesn’t fix the problem.

People need to understand your price before they’ll pay it

Your messaging should do the heavy lifting. That doesn’t mean telling a long story about your supply chain or how many hours went into development (although that can help). It means anchoring the price in what matters to your customer.

  • What does this product help them do better, faster, or with less frustration?

  • What makes it more effective or more enjoyable than other options?

  • What’s the real value it offers - beyond the thing itself?

You’re selling a result, a benefit, or a feeling that makes the price make sense.

For example:

  • A handmade item might take longer to produce, but that slower process often means better materials, attention to detail, and uniqueness. If you communicate that clearly, your audience sees the value in paying more for it.

  • A product made in smaller batches might not have economies of scale but that scarcity and care can become a benefit, not a drawback.

  • A product with excellent customer service, longer warranties, or better usability isn’t just a purchase. It’s peace of mind. That’s something people will pay for.

But only if you tell them clearly, confidently, and in language they understand.

Pricing is a trust exercise

When a brand has done the work to define its proposition, when it knows what it stands for, what sets it apart, and who it’s built for, that confidence becomes contagious. It shows up in the copy, shows up in the visuals and in how you talk about what you’ve created.

And when your audience can feel that confidence, they’re more likely to trust your pricing, even if it’s higher than expected.

But when you sound unsure, vague, or like you’re trying to sell “everything to everyone,” the opposite happens. People don’t know how to categorise you. They don’t understand where you sit in the market or why you’re priced where you are.

That confusion leads to hesitation and hesitation leads to lost sales.

So before you slash your prices, ask:

  • Have I clearly articulated why this product costs what it does?

  • Have I positioned this offer for the right audience - one who actually values the benefit?

  • Is the value obvious in the first 5 seconds of landing on my website or social feed?

  • Have I shown why this is better than the other options they’re considering?

If the answer is no, lowering your price won’t solve the problem. In fact, it may create new ones - like attracting the wrong audience altogether or the collapse of your commercial foundations because the price isn’t sustainable.

Price is only one part of the equation

When your product is clearly positioned, when your offer resonates with the right people, and when the value is visible — price becomes far less of an obstacle.

So the next time you find yourself wondering whether you’re charging too much, stop and check the real problem.

You might not need to lower your prices. You might just need to explain them better.

If you think this might be your problem too, book a free discovery call today. We can look at your margins and your value proposition so your marketing and your money work together.