Tax Talks
  • Home
  • Episodes
  • People
  • Articles
  • Contact
  • Search
  • Menu Menu

206 | Pricing

Sponsored By

The secret of pricing is not in the WHAT but in the HOW.

Pricing

Pricing doesn’t stand alone. It is an important part of your overall strategy. The market position you seek, the story you tell, how you present yourself.

Pricing is easy to get wrong. Set your price too high and you price yourself out of the market. Set it too low and clients see no value. There is a sweet spot somewhere in between, but how to find it? This is the questions we asked Ed Chan, co-founder of WIZE Mentoring and founder and non-executive chairman of Chan & Naylor.

Here is what we learned but please listen in as Ed explains all this much better than we ever could.

To listen while you drive, walk or work, just access the episode through a free podcast app on your mobile phone.

Pricing

There are three types of pricing –  time, fixed and value pricing. Charging an hourly rate (time) used to be the most common approach, but fixed and value pricing are gaining in popularity.

Time

You just charge the time it takes. If it takes longer, so be it. If it takes less, great. 

The argument for charging actual time is that it is safe – for you. You transfer all risks to the client. If it takes longer than expected, the client pays.

The argument against time cost is that there is no incentive to become more efficient. The less efficient you are, the more money you make – within reason. Another argument is that it creates angst in clients and fee disputes.

Fixed

You quote a price and that is it. It is fixed. You take the good and the bad. Sometimes you finish early and make extra profit. Other times you go over budget and lose money.

The argument for fixed pricing is that is is simple and predictable. The argument against is that in our industry it is often hard to predict how long something will take. There are a lot of nuances from client to client. You bear all the risk.

Value

Value pricing is based on the value your client receives. If a service is of high value to a client, they are willing to pay more. If it is of little value, they will want to pay less. So you adjust your pricing accordingly.

Mix

These three approaches rarely stand alone. You often mix them without realising.

If you invoice by time and charged around $1,000 in the past, but this time it took 3 times as long, you are not going to suddenly charge $3,000. You will charge more, but probably not the full amount. So there is some fixed pricing in your time pricing.

If something was actually really easy and fast but saved your client a lot of money, you will probably charge more than if you hadn’t produced such a good outcome. And so there is some value pricing in there as well.

It is the HOW, not the WHAT

But pricing is not really about the What, but about the HOW.  The method you choose – the WHAT – doesn’t go to the core of the issue. The core of the issue is HOW you do it. How do you manage your client’s expectations re price and outcome? How do you communicate the price?

The WHAT is just a method. It doesn’t matter what method you use as long as you communicate it.  You will run into issues with any method if you don’t properly communicate your pricing.

The secret is not in the WHAT but in the HOW.  

Summary

So pricing is not just about the actual amount you charge and the method you use to come to that amount – be it time, fixed or value.  Much more important is how you communicate this price.

To hear more of Ed’s business growth strategies for accounting firm owners, please visit www.wizementoring.com/taxtalks where you can download a copy of WIZE Mentoring’s free eBook – The Accountants 20 Hour Workweek.

 

MORE

Buy A Parcel of Fees

More About Buying Parcels of Fees

How to Find and Retain Great Staff

 

Disclaimer: Tax Talks does not provide financial or tax advice. All information on Tax Talks is of a general nature only and might no longer be up to date or correct. You should seek professional accredited tax and financial advice when considering whether the information is suitable to your or your client’s circumstances.

Last Updated on 29 April 2020

Tax Talks spoke to Edward Chan - Co-founder & Non-Executive Chairman at Chan & Naylor - for more details.

Popular
  • The Panama Papers30 | The Panama Papers27/02/2018 - 6:11 AM
  • Common reporting standards36 | Common Reporting Standards10/04/2018 - 1:15 AM
  • team structure199 | Team Structure17/11/2019 - 10:40 PM
  • Ideal Team Structure200 | Ideal Team Structure18/11/2019 - 10:41 PM
Recent
  • 437 | Subdiv EA and Beyond24/03/2025 - 2:33 PM
  • 436 | The Bendel Case Part 206/03/2025 - 9:06 AM
  • 435 | The Bendel Case Part 105/03/2025 - 10:02 AM
  • 434 | Item 17 Ministerial Determination09/12/2024 - 9:47 AM
Comments
  • […] might remember that the Top 10 list for 2020 included...08/03/2021 - 9:16 AM by Two Drunk Accountants | How do you create a podcast | Tax Talks
  • […] With a turnover of $1m that is pretty close to...04/03/2021 - 9:32 AM by CATS Accountants | Unique in seven ways | Tax Talks
  • […] a turnover of $1m that is pretty close to the...01/03/2021 - 9:26 AM by CATS Accountants | Unique in seven ways | Tax Talks
  • […] CRS podcast link – https://www.taxtalks.com.au/common-reporting-standards/...21/09/2020 - 11:46 PM by Common Reporting Standard - The ATO battle against tax havens
Tags
Accounting Administration ATO Business CGT Charity Child Support Class Concession COVID-19 Cryptocurrency Data Debt Deduction Depreciation Div 7A Estate Family Farm FBT Finance GST Income Innovation Insurance International Law Management Payroll Policy Practice Practitioner Property PSI Reports Restructure SME SMSF Software Succession Tax Tax Concessions TPB Trust US

Topics

  • Accounting (3)
  • CGT (39)
  • COVID-19 (23)
  • Cryptocurrency (5)
  • Div 7A (21)
  • FBT (4)
  • Finance (9)
  • GST (19)
  • Innovation (7)
  • Insurance (4)
  • International Tax (44)
  • Land Tax (5)
  • Law (41)
  • Other (10)
  • Payroll (6)
  • Policy (17)
  • Practice Management (83)
  • Property (12)
  • PSI (5)
  • Retirement (1)
  • SMSF (70)
  • Software (23)
  • Stamp Duty (2)
  • Tax Administration (23)
  • Tax Concessions (7)
  • Tax Deductions (17)
  • Tax Effective Structuring (7)
  • Tax Practitioners Board (5)
  • Trust (65)

KEYWORDs

Accounting Administration ATO Business CGT Charity Child Support Class Concession COVID-19 Cryptocurrency Data Debt Deduction Depreciation Div 7A Estate Family Farm FBT Finance GST Income Innovation Insurance International Law Management Payroll Policy Practice Practitioner Property PSI Reports Restructure SME SMSF Software Succession Tax Tax Concessions TPB Trust US
205 | Why the Partnership Model Doesn't Work Partnership Model Doesn't Work Electronic Distribution Platforms 207 | Electronic Distribution Platforms

Tax Talks

Tax Talks is Australia’s tax news podcast for tax professionals. Informative, entertaining and free.

Liability Limited by a scheme under the Professional Standards Legislations

Latest Episodes

  • 437 | Subdiv EA and Beyond24/03/2025 - 2:33 PM
  • 436 | The Bendel Case Part 206/03/2025 - 9:06 AM
  • 435 | The Bendel Case Part 105/03/2025 - 10:02 AM

Connect with us

Contact Us





    Please prove you are human by selecting the truck.

    © Copyright - Tax Talks - powered by Enfold WordPress Theme
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • TERMS
    • PRIVACY
    205 | Why the Partnership Model Doesn’t Work Partnership Model Doesn't Work Electronic Distribution Platforms 207 | Electronic Distribution Platforms
    Scroll to top