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Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Kirk Bowman
100 episodes
9 months ago
Art of Value Show - Learn to create happy customers and make more money by discovering value, creating options and starting to price.
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All content for Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing is the property of Kirk Bowman and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Art of Value Show - Learn to create happy customers and make more money by discovering value, creating options and starting to price.
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Business
Episodes (20/100)
Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Why Cash Does Matter with Ron Baker – 129

In this episode, Ron Baker and I continue with Part 2 of the What Matters series. If profit does not matter, then what should replace it? Cash planning and budgeting. This is a huge opportunity for accountants and consultants because you can equip your customer to make stronger business decisions. Will you seize it?











About Ron Baker



Ron Baker is the author of Implementing Value Pricing, the foremost resource on the subject. He is the founder of the VeraSage Institute, and co-host of The Soul of Enterprise podcast. Recently, he became the Chief Value Office (CVO) at Armanino, one of the Top 20 accounting firms in the US.



* ron@verasage.com (Email)* @ronaldbaker (Twitter)* LinkedIn
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6 years ago
52 minutes 32 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Why Profit Does Not Matter with Reginald Tomas Lee – 128

In this episode, Dr. Reginald Tomas Lee explains why cash and profit are not the same. Cash is the life blood of a business. It drives daily operational decisions. Profit, on the other hand, is a relative metric (not measurement), dependent on the cost formula chosen. Executives and managers need to understand the difference and when to use each one.











About Dr. Reginald Tomas Lee



Dr. Lee is Professor of Operations and Management at Xaiver University. He is the author of five books including Lies, Damned Lies, and Cost Accounting and his latest Strategic Cost Transformation.



Reginald started his career as an engineer at IBM, and then worked in supply chain management at Ernst & Young. His consulting customers include Disney, DuPont, Home Depot and Toyota.



* Business Dynamics & Research (Consulting)* leer8@xaiver.edu (Email)
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6 years ago
48 minutes 27 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
The Business Model of Tomorrow with Ed Kless – 127

In this episode, Ed Kless and I tackle the myth that economic development has reached its peak through technology, especially artificial intelligence. We explore the theme through three books: Life After Google by George Gilder, Tomorrow 3.0 by Michael Munger, and Subscribed by Tien Tzuo.







This episode was recorded live at Kellys in Allen, TX–one of our favorite places to have lunch. (If you are in town, be sure to try the brisket nachos.)





About Ed Kless



Ed Kless is my friend, mentor and colleague at the VeraSage Institute. He is the Director of Partner Strategy and Development at Sage Software. He is also host of the Sage Advice Podcast and co-host of The Soul of Enterprise with Ron Baker.
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6 years ago
46 minutes 47 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
An Authentic After Action Review with Joe Woodard – 126

In this episode, Joe Woodard and I conduct an After Action Review on Scaling New Heights 2018. The conference was held in June 2018. This episode was recorded a couple of weeks later. Joe is very forthright about what went well, what did not, and what he learned for next time.









About Joe Woodard



Joe Woodard is the founder and CEO of Woodard Events. He is the host of Scaling New Heights, a conference for QuickBooks Pro Advisors. Joe has been recognized by Accounting Today as one of the Top 100 Influencers in accounting and is a regular contributor to Insightful Accountant.




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6 years ago
53 minutes 27 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
A Bookkeeper Learns to Price with Carrie Mulrooney – 125

In this episode, Carrie Mulrooney and I discuss her transition from hourly billing to value pricing. She met Ron Baker at an accounting conference in 2015, and shortly thereafter, joined his Black Swan program. Within a year, she had converted most of her bookkeeping practice to value pricing.









About Carrie Mulrooney



Carrie Mulrooney is the founder and CEO of Mulrooney & Associates, a bookkeeping firm in Ontario, Canada. She is a Certified Professional Bookkeeper. Her firm was selected as the 2017 Bookkeeping Firm of the Year in Canada. She spends her summers in Nova Scotia (which is also known as northern Maine).



* LinkedIn* Facebook
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6 years ago
37 minutes 58 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
It Is Not About the Technology with Jody Padar – 124

In this episode, Jody Padar and I discuss the impact technology has had on the accounting industry. And ironically, we conclude it is not really about the technology. It is simply forcing the profession to move in the direction it is should go anyway.









About Jody Padar



Jody Padar is a CPA with 25 years of experience. She founded New Vision CPA Group out of her frustration with “old school” firms. Her latest book is the The Radical CPA, written to help accountants create a better experience for their customers and employees.



* jody@newvisioncpagroup.com (Email)* @jodypadarcpa (Twitter)* LinkedIn
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7 years ago
58 minutes 51 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Does Technology Replace or Liberate? with Jeff Kofman – 123

In this episode, Jeff Kofman and I discuss his journey from journalism to tech startup CEO. Jeff explains how he came up with the idea for Trint.com, an AI (artificial intelligence) transcription service. He then shares insights into the pricing strategy for their SaaS (software as a service) product.









About Jeff Kofman



Jeff Kofman is the Founder and CEO of Trint. Trint creates a transcription from a recording with timestamped links from the text to audio. Before founding Trint, Jeff was a news correspondent for CBC, CBS and ABC. He won an Emmy for his coverage of the Arab Spring in 2011.



* jeff@trint.com (Email)



Sample Transcription



Below is an example of a Trint transcript with no manual editing.



[00:00:00] Welcome to THE ART OF VALUE show Jeff Kofman. Jeff is the CEO and founder of Trint dot com. Trint started at an Italian Air B and B in 2014 prior to founding Trent. Jeff has been a news correspondent for CBC CBS and ABC. He actually won an Emmy for his coverage of the Arab Spring in 2011 and he speaks English French and Spanish. Jeff welcome to the show.



[00:00:28] Well thanks Kurt. Thanks for inviting me.



[00:00:30] Well it's a pleasure. I learned of Trint, I can't remember how I think it was in a Facebook group and when I learned about the service I thought you know what this would make an interesting topic for the show. But before we get into that what's the most important thing you could share about pricing customers aren't always looking for the lowest price they're looking for the best value.



[00:00:51] And I think for someone like me it was a first-time entrepreneur I spent my life as a journalist and I think oh my gosh if we raised prices will they run away. But not if they see value. I think there's an axiom that I've run into many times which says that startups usually underpriced their product and I can understand why because you don't want to scare people away when you're trying to attract customers. But the thing is you've got to charge what makes you a sustainable company. And in our case, we have a huge amount of innovation in our pipeline. And so, if we're going to be a viable business and so far, we're very much viable.



[00:01:28] We need to be able to charge a price that allows us to build a team that can build the product that people like you and me as a journalist and so many other people describe that tension between OK we want to make sure we get customers but yet realizing the value that you're creating for the customer and pricing appropriately for that. How do you resolve that tension or how would you suggest somebody who is trying to work through that approach it?



[00:01:56] I think pricing strategy is one of the biggest puzzles of the journey for me on the startup because partly what is challenging about trends is that we're inventing something that has no precedent. And so, we look really hard for models that take lessons from you know we transcribe recorded audio and video in the cloud through artificial intelligence using automated speech and get you the mechanism on the tree to editors to get perfect. That's always been the conundrum really cool that you can be you can ask our other major speech recognition to do so well but it makes mistakes. And for that reason, for me you know my 30 years in journalism flawed data is useless data. I can't if I can't verify I can't use it. And what Trint did was find a way to do that so you know we try to measure what.
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7 years ago
48 minutes 44 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Emotional Blind Spots Influence Your Pricing with Wes Higbee – 122

In this episode, Wes Higbee and I explore the impact that emotional blindspots can have on the success or failure of a software project. The first challenge is they are blind (unseen). The second is they are rooted in emotion (feelings). Wes explains how to overcome both challenges.









About Wes Higbee



Wes Higbee is the principal consultant at Full City Technology. He has a background in .NET and JavaScript development. Recently, he made the transition from software developer to consultant. He helps organizations increase the success rate of their internal software projects.



* weshigbee.com (Blog)
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7 years ago
53 minutes 24 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Using YouTube to Establish Authority with Hector Garcia – 121

In this episode, Hector Garcia and I discuss the impact creating videos for YouTube has had on his business. If you go to any popular accounting conference, Hector is probably speaking on marketing with YouTube. We explore why video, why YouTube, and the things he has learned through marketing with video.









About Hector Garcia



Hector is a CPA who was selected as one of the Top 10 QuickBooks Advisors for 2017 and awarded Top 40 Under 40 by CPA Practice Advisor. He graduated from Florida International University with four degrees: marketing, finance, taxation and accounting. He has one of the top YouTube channels for QuickBooks users with over 2 million views.



* hectorgarcia.com (Website)* hector@hectorgarcia.com (Email)
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8 years ago
58 minutes 15 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
The Impact of Technology on Value with Joe Woodard – 120

In this episode, Joe Woodard and I explore the impact technology has on the value you create for your customer. Joe explains why, although you cannot ignore technology, it is only a tool to achieve the desired outcome for your customer. Then, we explore the theme Rise of the Machines for Scaling New Heights 2017.









About Joe Woodard



Joe Woodard is the Founder and CEO of the Woodard Companies, a preferred training partner for Intuit. Woodard is the creator of Scaling New Heights, a conference for QuickBooks ProAdvisors. He was recently selected one of the Top 100 Most Influential People in accounting by Accounting Today.



* @joewoodard (Twitter)
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8 years ago
53 minutes 23 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Pricing, Procurement & the Ad Agency with Tom Lewis – 119

In this episode, Tom Lewis and I discuss the state of value pricing in advertising in the United Kingdom. Our conversation explores having an effective value conversation with procurement. Then, he shares insights from the keynote speakers at the 2017 IPA conference in London.









About Tom Lewis



Tom Lewis is Financial Director at the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising (IPA) in Great Britain. He is the leader for the commerce “pillar” at the IPA. Although he is a Chartered Accountant, he has over 15 years experience in advertising.



* LinkedIn* @TomLewis_IPA (Twitter)
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8 years ago
49 minutes 35 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
The Who, What and Why of Value with Ed Kless – 118

In this episode, Ed Kless and I discuss his recent trip to Australia. He was in Melbourne to present a strategy workshop and speak at Sage Summit 2017. We explore the strategy framework of Why, Who, What and How. Then, we review his sessions from Sage Summit, Healing Leadership and Innovation Beyond Technology.









About Ed Kless



Ed Kless is my friend, mentor and colleague at the VeraSage Institute. He is the Director of Partner Strategy and Development at Sage Software. He is also co-host of The Soul of Enterprise with Ron Baker.



* edkless.com (Blog)* @edkless (Twitter)
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8 years ago
45 minutes 19 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Prevention: The Next Legal Frontier with Carr and Lamb – 117

During this episode, Jeffrey and Patrick explain why the best legal problem is the one you never have. They share their experience as customer and attorney, and then colleagues helping Fortune 1000 companies create a culture of risk prevention.









About Jeffery Carr



Jeffry Carr is the Former Senior Vice-President and General Counsel at FMC Technlogies. While at FMC, he hired Patrick Lamb of Valorem Law to help prevent lawsuits from ever occurring. Fast forward, Jeffrey joined Valorem Law as the head of Valorem Next, their consulting division focused on identifying and managing risk.



Contact Jeffrey Carr & Patrick Lamb



* @ValoremNextCarr (Jeffery, Twitter)* @ValoremLamb (Patrick, Twitter)
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8 years ago
47 minutes 21 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Commercial Litigation for a Fixed Price with Patrick Lamb – 116

In this episode, Patrick Lamb and I discuss his experience implementing value pricing at his law firm, and then consulting with other firms. Next, we explore the state of the business of law from the Value Line Adjustment to the Great Reset of 2008.









About Patrick Lamb



Patrick Lamb is the founder and a partner at Valorem Law, which practices commercial litigation for a fixed price. He has 34 years experience as a trial lawyer for Fortune 1000 companies.



Patrick is the author of Alternative Fees for Litigators and Their Clients, advocating value pricing for law firms. He writes the New Normal column for American Bar Association Journal.



* @valoremlamb (Twitter)* patricklamb@valoremlaw.com (Email)



What difference does it make?
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8 years ago
43 minutes 12 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Value Pricing in the Accounting 100 with Michelle Golden – 115

In this episode, Michelle Golden and I discuss her experience pursuing the adoption of value pricing at KCoe Isom. Our conversation covers the “better way” of pricing, the advantage of options and the “add-on” strategy. We conclude with the impact of value pricing on new employees.









About Michelle Golden



Michelle Golden is a Partner and Growth Strategist at KCoe Isom, an Accounting 100 firm. Her responsibilities include value creation and pricing strategy.



Michelle has been recognized as one of the 100 Most Influential People in accounting. She is a Senior Fellow at the VeraSage Institute and the author of Social Media Strategies for Professionals.



* Emgolden@kcoe.com (Email)
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8 years ago
54 minutes 5 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Value Pricing for Business Counsel with Peter Carayiannis – 114
Peter Carayiannis started his legal career with a national law firm in Canada. Later, while working as a solo attorney, he discovered his niche, general business counsel to corporations. Peter then founded Conduit Law, which has become Deloitte Conduit Law, an affiliate of Deloitte. Among his unique qualifications, he is licensed to practice law in the United States and Canada.
Switching to Value Pricing
What is the most important thing you can share about pricing?
It is not that hard. Clients do not hire a lawyer to buy time (hours). They are seeking a solution to a problem.
How did you first realize the billable hour was not the way to operate your business?
Peter had early success with entrepreneurial clients. He realized his customers might not call when they should because the clock was running. When he discovered fixed fees, he realized it would encourage his clients to talk to him more frequently.
How did your existing customers react when you said you wanted to change how you were doing business?
They welcomed it with enthusiasm and questions about how it would work. Peter was candid with his clients. They had a conversation about what the client wanted to achieve and selected a number based on experience. Then they met in 90 days to review and adjust as necessary.
What metrics do you use to track progress and success with your clients?
The metrics are tailored to the client and the nature of the work. For example, if Conduit Law is helping the sales function, they will track how many contracts and the total revenue they supported in a quarter to help the sales team close business.
Succeeding with Value Pricing
Does value pricing work in a traditional law practice, where lawyers are working primarily offsite?
Yes, for example, Valorem Law in Chicago does value pricing for corporate litigation. In Peter's business, the first tier of pricing is for what he calls “run the company” work. It is consistent, repeating business. The second tier is per piece work, a set price each time a certain event happens. His goal is to provide budget certainty and pricing transparency for his customer.
Do you use options when you sit down with a customer to price the next quarter?
Yes, for example, the level of access. Should the lawyer be available 24 x 7, or business days 9am-5pm? Does the customer need a longer or shorter turn-around time?
What is the Client Value Adjustment?
It is a statement at the bottom of the invoice that invites the client to adjust the invoice, up or down, to reflect the value created. It has only be exercised by Peter's clients four times, three of which were an increase. (He credits Patrick Lamb of Valorem Law with the idea.)
 What do you think is the future of value pricing in the legal field?
It is a client-driven movement. Furthermore, it in the early-adoption phase. However, if more graduating law students will challenge the billable hour, it will slowly create the momentum necessary.
What is one of your best stories about creating value for a customer?
Conduit Law was invited by a financial institution to bid on a short-term project. The client was unsure of the exact scope but had a hard deadline for the outcome. The client asked Peter to include an incentive plan.
Peter offered the client one fee for a simple matter and a higher fee for a complex matter. The client had the authority to decide what was a simple or complex matter.
Peter also offered a bonus plan. The client could increase or decrease the total budget by 20% at the end of the project, solely on factors like timeliness, responsiveness, and quality. Conduit Law won the business and received the full bonus.
Contact Peter Carayiannis

* Website – Deloitte.ca
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8 years ago
46 minutes 2 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
WordPress News Is Not A Commodity with Brian Krogsgard – 113
Brian Krogsgard is a WordPress developer from Birmingham, AL. He is the founder and editor of Post Status, a WordPress newsletter, and the host of Post Status Draft, a podcast for WordPress developers. He started working with WordPress in 2010, after graduating from Auburn University with a degree in mechanical engineering.
Starting As a WordPress Developer
What is the most important thing you can share about pricing?
Pricing is not “one size fits all.” It varies depending on the customer,  context, and degree of risk. The objective should be to maximize value for the customer and profit, not revenue, for the business.
What was your journey to becoming a freelancer?
His first development position was at a small agency, helping clients transition from a proprietary CMS to WordPress. At the next agency, Brian was the operations manager. He was responsible for determining scope, setting prices and presenting proposals to customers.
He started pricing websites by the number of pages or functional modules. Over time, he learned to price by the number of leads and average revenue per lead that the website would create for the customer.
What is the difference between developing websites and construction projects?
The progress of a construction project is very visible to the client. However, a website is not something a client can drive by and see. Regular communication is necessary to convey progress to the client.
Did the agencies where you worked compete through price or specialization?
The first agency was a full-service design shop, mainly in the state of Alabama. Their strongest competitive advantage was personal relationships, building trust with the customer.
The second agency was a boutique firm, focusing on high-end WordPress sites. Customers were attracted to their expertise even when the price was higher than the competition.
Making the Transition to Publisher
What did you learn from writing the article How much should a custom WordPress website cost?
The article was written in 3 hours one night from his frustration writing customer proposals. The feedback to the article helped Brian build a framework of the most common factors when setting a price. The article was viewed over 50,000 times in the first few weeks alone. The short answer to the question is, “It depends.”
What was your journey from free news to paid memberships with Post Status?
Brian learned web development by writing about WordPress. He started PostStatus in 2013, after writing WordPress news for other sites. Then in 2015, he began the transition to a paid membership site for $99 per year. The site has grown to 700+ paid members.
What did you learn about pricing membership sites?
There are three ways to buy PostStatus. First, a dozen companies are sponsors because of Brian's reputation in the WordPress community. Second, individuals can pay either $99 or $365 annually. $99 is the sweet spot, an impulse buy. $365 is a patron level, supporting the artist.
What is one of your best stories about creating value for a customer?
Each year, Brian chooses a non-profit to which he contributes his consulting services. It is an opportunity to keep his skills sharp and help a cause in which he believes.
Contact Brian Krogsgard

* Website – PostStatus.com
* Twitter – @krogsgard

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8 years ago
47 minutes 7 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Making the Switch at a Large Firm with Simmons & Barnes – 112
Dan Simmons is the Managing Director of the Lantern Legal Group, and Andrew Barnes is the Chief Financial Officer. The company is the largest regional law firm in Australia. Andrew is also President of the Australasian Legal Management Practice Association (ALMPA).
This interview was recorded during a trip to the United States with John Chisholm. We discussed making the switch from hourly billing to value pricing at a firm of 100+ employees.
First Impressions of Value Pricing
What is the most important thing you can share about pricing?

* Dan – The ability to agree to the price and payment terms up front with the client is beneficial to the practice of law.
* Andrew – Pricing should be different tomorrow than it was yesterday. Hourly billing has an expiration date.
* Dan – Value pricing helps their law firm comply with Uniform Law in Australia. Uniform Law states, for any matter over $750, the lawyer must provide an estimate of the fee to the client.

Why did you decide to make the switch to value pricing?

* Dan – Lantern Legal operates as three brands. Harwood Andrews serves a broad range of clients including family law and local municipalities. Sladen Legal focuses on business clients, especially in Melbourne. Adley Burstyner specializes in class action litigation.
* Andrew – Ron Baker and Paul O'Bryne made convincing presentations to the leadership of the firm about value pricing.
* Dan – The firm needed a better way to attract and reward the next generation of lawyers than tracking hours in 6-minute increments.

What was your initial reaction when you learned about value pricing?

* Andrew – It was exciting to learn about the concept. Since the firm had to continue to do business, a strategy was developed to transition over time.
* Dan – After two years of promoting value pricing on their webiste–Agreed Pricing in their lexicon–the firm started offering of at least one alternative fee arrangement to every client. It is a progression that is starting to snowball as the firm grows more confident in its ability to judge value and set prices.
* Andrew – The performance of lawyers has traditionally been measured by the number of billable hours. Part of the transition is choosing new metrics for performance.
* Dan – Currently, the firm allocates a portion of each fixed price to each attorney based on his or her role. However, the firm is moving toward attributing revenue to the practice group, away from individual performance metrics.

What has been the reaction of younger attorneys to the practice of value pricing?

* Andrew – They are very enthusiastic when discussing the concept. The challenge is to keep the momentum going in the day-to-day practice. Those who have previously billed by the hour now call it the “Dark Ages.”
* Dan – There is peer pressure to use Agreed Pricing when a matter is referred from one practice group, that uses value pricing, to another which does not. Also, the firm rotates seats on its pricing council to expose more attorneys to the practice of value pricing.

The Advantages of Value Pricing
What is a pricing council?

* Andrew – It is a group of attorneys including principals and first-year associates who review the scope and pricing of every matter over $5,000. Submissions are made using a standard template and feedback is provided by e...
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8 years ago
48 minutes 10 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Determining the Value of the Intangible with Nick Disabato – 111
Nick Disabato is the founder of Draft, a design consultancy in Chicago. He is best known for A/B testing through two productized services, Draft Revise and Revise Express. He is the author of three books including The A/B Testing Manual. Nick is a frequency speaker at conferences including South by Southwest and Web 2.0.
The Business of Design
What is the most important thing you can share about pricing?
You set the pricing. You control the conversation by asking the right questions, setting proper expectations, and solving the right expensive problem. You have to overcome “imposter syndrome” and charge for the value you are providing.
How do you determine the value of something intangible?
Cite case studies for the same service, either your own or from another business. There are 50 years of data and articles that prove design creates value. Read the blogs of designers who understand design serves commerce. Communicate how design solves real business problems.
What is your advice to a designer, fresh out of school?
Realize design is art in the service of client work so you can sell things. Read books about having a business in the design field. Then decide if you really want to be a business owner.

* Design Is a Job
* You Are My Favorite Client
* Million Dollar Consulting
* Profit First

How can you leverage case studies from other designers?
Cite them. Link to them. If someone stands behind it, use it as evidence of the value of design. The likelihood your customer will hire the other company is less than you think. Nick cites the $300M Button Case Study by Jared Spool in his marketing.
Determine the ROI of Design
How do you translate a design into an ROI (return-on-investment)?
During the project, measure as much as possible, for example, revenue tracking in Google Analytics. After the project, ask the customer what they got out of it. Then, ask the customer to for a case study. Follow up with the customer three, six and twelve months afterward.
How do you approach the value conversation during the sale process?
Start with the Alan Weiss trifecta: Why me? Why now? Why in this manner?
Other questions: How much are you making right now? Where are the leaks you think exist in your business? What is your website traffic? What is your conversion rate? In summary, start a conversation by asking questions.
Listen to the customer and then probe further. Demonstrate your desire to serve by helping the customer understand the business problem deeper. It shows the customer you have a sincere interest in his success.
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8 years ago
42 minutes 17 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
The Most Important Thing About Pricing Vol. 3 – 110
For the third straight year, Art of Value is celebrating the New Year with a compilation from the past twelve months. At the start of each show, I ask the same question:
What is the most important thing you can share about pricing?
In this episode, we revisit the answers from 30 of the expert guests from 2016.

* Raise your rates on a regular basis. – The Value of Social Media with Mojca Marš
* Charge more. – A Masterclass in Creating Options with Keith Perhac
* It starts in your brain. – The Value of Telling A Story with Michael Hudson
* Pick a lane. – Picking Your Value Lane with Jeffrey Shaw
* It doesn't have to be that hard. – Going Timeless in the Legal Profession with Beth MacLean


* The key to higher prices is to deliver more value to your clients. – How to Create Value Through Positioning with Philip Morgan
* Pricing can be systematized. –  Learn to Value Price Through a Process with Andrew Robertson
* Finding the value for the customer and relating your price to that value. – Creating Proposals That Win Business with Curtis McHale
*
The value of the product or service is determined by the customer. – The Mindset for Creating Value with Dennis McIntee

* Invest in authentic relationships. – Compensating Your Team Based on Value with Christopher Marston


* Take a risk and offer a proposal with options. – Singing the Praises of Value Pricing with BJ Lee
* Pricing is part of a mental negotiation between the seller and buyer. – The Mental Health of the Entrepreneur with Cory Miller
* Start with the customer first. – Seek the Desired Outcome First with Lincoln Murphy
* The meeting is over once you start discussing price. – Learning the Art of Frame Control with Oren Klaff
* Embrace what you are worth. – Value and Pricing in the Enterprise with Matthew Habuda


* There is more to pricing than the number the customers pays. – A Value Conversation for the Solopreneur with Eric Davis
* You are charging less than you should be. – How the Customer Decides to Buy with Sean D’Souza
* Value pricing is more profitable than the alternatives. – Value Pricing Is A Competitive Advantage with Michael Bradley
* You are never going to get the price exactly right.
Show more...
8 years ago
40 minutes 53 seconds

Art of Value Show - Discover Value | Create Options | Start Pricing
Art of Value Show - Learn to create happy customers and make more money by discovering value, creating options and starting to price.