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How I Found the Right Price for My Product

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My Journey to Sustainable Pricing: Experiments, Failures, and Small Wins

The moment you're ready to launch something you've poured your heart into, a new, terrifying question looms: "What should I charge?" For me, this was the ultimate paralysis. My brain would freeze, imagining users scoffing at my price, or worse, completely ignoring my product because it was too expensive. It felt like standing on a cliff edge, fearing the fall.

A person looking confused at a pricing table with question marks.

Pricing is, without a doubt, one of the hardest parts of building a product, especially when you're bootstrapping. I started with the most basic instinct: give it away for free.

Then, I dipped my toes into "cheap." My thinking was, if it's affordable, people will buy it, right? Wrong.

Very wrong. Neither of those approaches felt sustainable, and honestly, they didn't attract the right kind of users.

This led me down a rabbit hole of trying different pricing models. I experimented with a single, low monthly fee.

Then I tried a slightly higher fee. I even considered a one-time purchase model.

Each time, I felt like I was just guessing, hoping something would stick. It was exhausting and, frankly, a little embarrassing.

I was building products, but I wasn't building a sustainable business.

My "Value Proposition Testing" and "Tiered Pricing Experimentation" Process

After a lot of fumbling, I started to develop a more structured approach, which I've been calling my "Value Proposition Testing" and "Tiered Pricing Experimentation" process. It's not some guru-level secret, just a way to systematically understand what users are willing to pay for and why.

Step 1: Define Your Core Value. What is the single biggest problem your product solves? For my task management app, it wasn't just about listing tasks; it was about reducing overwhelm and giving users back control of their day. This is the foundation.

Step 2: Identify Different User Segments. Who are your users? Are they individuals, small teams, or larger businesses?

Each segment often has different needs and different budgets. For instance, a solo freelancer might need basic features, while a small team might need collaboration tools.

Step 3: Create Tiered Pricing Based on Value. This is where the experimentation really kicks in. I started creating different "tiers" of my product, each offering a progressively higher level of value and features.

  • Tier 1 (The "Starter"): This tier would include the core functionality, perfect for individuals or those just starting out. I priced this based on the perceived value of solving their primary pain point.
  • Tier 2 (The "Pro"): This tier would add features that enhance productivity or offer more advanced capabilities. Think integrations, more customization, or priority support. The price jump here reflected the added value.
  • Tier 3 (The "Team"): For collaboration, this tier would include features specifically for teams, like shared workspaces and user management. This was priced higher to reflect the increased utility and user count.
A diagram showing three pricing tiers with increasing features and prices.

Step 4: Gather Real Feedback (The Hard Part). Once I had these tiers, I didn't just set them and forget them. I actively reached out to early users. I asked them:

  • "Does this price feel fair for the value you're getting?"
  • "Which features are most important to you in each tier?"
  • "What would make you consider upgrading to a higher tier?"

This feedback was gold. Sometimes, a feature I thought was crucial was a low priority for users. Other times, users were willing to pay more for something I had underestimated.

Small Wins and What I've Learned

This process wasn't an instant fix. I had days where the feedback was discouraging, and I questioned everything. But slowly, I started to see patterns.

I learned that people are willing to pay for solutions that genuinely save them time or reduce stress. The perceived value is often more important than the cost of building the feature.

When I moved from a single, low-price point to tiered pricing, I saw a significant increase in conversion rates. Users could choose a plan that fit their current needs and budget, and they saw a clear path to upgrade as their own needs grew.

A graph showing an upward trend in conversion rates after implementing tiered pricing.

For example, with one of my products, I initially offered it for $5/month. It wasn't moving the needle.

I then introduced a free tier with limited features, a $15/month "Pro" tier with most features, and a $30/month "Team" tier. Suddenly, I had users opting for the Pro tier, and a few small teams even signed up for the Team plan.

It wasn't millions, but it was sustainable revenue. It meant I could keep building and improving.

Takeaways for You

If you're a bootstrapped founder struggling with pricing, here are a few actionable insights:

  1. Stop Guessing, Start Testing: Don't be afraid to put a price on your product. Even a "wrong" price is a data point.
  2. Focus on Value, Not Cost: Price based on the problem you solve and the value you deliver, not just how much it cost you to build.
  3. Tiered Pricing is Your Friend: It allows users to self-select based on their needs and budget, making it easier for them to say "yes."
  4. Talk to Your Users: They are your best source of information. Ask them about pricing, features, and what they truly value.
  5. Iterate, Iterate, Iterate: Pricing isn't a one-time decision. Be prepared to adjust as you learn more about your users and your market.

Finding a sustainable pricing strategy is a journey, not a destination. It's about continuous learning and a willingness to experiment. Keep building, keep learning, and don't be afraid to charge what your product is worth.

Hien Phan

Struggling to turn ideas into profitable products? Building 52 products in 365 days, sharing the real journey from concept to revenue. Weekly insights on product development and solo founder lessons.

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How I Found the Right Price for My Product | Hien Phan - Solo Developer Building 52 Products in 365 Days