
Biz Coach Insider+ - Thirty First Edition
Biz Coach Insider - 31st Edition (6/8/26) - A 10% Price Increase Won't Lose You the Clients You Want to Keep
You are underpricing right now. Most owners are.
You know it too. You feel it every time you send an invoice and a little voice says "I should be charging more for this." Then a second voice answers: "Raise prices and they'll leave."
So you freeze. You hold your rates for another year. You absorb rising costs. You work more for the same money and call it loyalty.
Let me tell you what I have watched happen with 150+ clients over the last 6 years. The owners who raised prices 10% almost never lost the clients they actually wanted. They lost a few. And the few they lost were usually the ones draining the most time, paying the slowest, and respecting the work the least.
A 10% increase is not a gamble. It's a filter.
Why this fear shows up, and why it lies to you
Here's the math nobody runs before they panic.
Say you have 20 clients paying $1,000 a month. That's $20,000.
Raise prices 10%. Now it's $1,100 each. If you lose two clients over it, you have 18 paying $1,100. That's $19,800. You're basically flat on revenue while serving two fewer accounts.
➡️ Same money. Less work. More capacity for clients who value you.
And that math assumes you lose 10% of your base over a 10% increase. You almost never do. In my experience the real number is closer to one or two clients out of twenty, and they were already halfway out the door.
✳️ The fear isn't about the clients you'd lose. It's about the conversation you don't want to have.
Leadership: This is a CEO decision, not a hope
When I ran wireless retail, I watched managers avoid hard pricing conversations because they wanted to be liked. Being liked is not a strategy. It's a tax you pay on yourself.
A CEO sets a price based on the value delivered and the cost to deliver it. An employee of their own company sets a price based on what feels safe.
Ask yourself directly: Are you pricing like the owner of the business, or like someone afraid of the owner's reaction?
The owners stuck in the Operator phase ($250K–$500K) almost always have a pricing problem hiding underneath their cash flow problem. They're busy. They're booked. And they're broke at the end of the month. That's not a volume issue. That's a pricing issue wearing a volume costume.
Financial Acumen: Know your numbers before you set your price
You cannot price with confidence if you don't know your margins.
Run these three numbers before your next increase:
1️⃣ What does it actually cost you to deliver one unit of your service or product? Include your time at a real rate.
2️⃣ What's your gross margin on each offer right now? If you don't know, that's the first emergency.
3️⃣ What has inflation and your own cost base done over the last two years? If your costs climbed 12% and your prices didn't move, you already took a pay cut. You just did it quietly.
✳️ A 10% increase in many service businesses doesn't add 10% to your bottom line. It adds far more, because your costs are mostly fixed and that new revenue drops almost straight to profit.
That's the part owners miss. Price increases are the highest-leverage profit move you have. Faster than new leads. Cheaper than new hires. Available today.
Sales & Marketing: How to actually raise the price
The increase is not the hard part. The delivery is. Here's how to do it without flinching.
✅ Tell existing clients in advance, with a clear date. No surprises on the invoice.
✅ Tie the new price to value, not to your costs. Nobody cares that your software bill went up. They care what they get.
✅ Give your best clients a heads-up and a short runway. Loyalty earns notice, not a permanent discount.
✅ Raise the price for new clients first if you're nervous. Watch them say yes. Then your confidence with existing clients goes up on its own.
❌ Don't apologize. The second you say "I'm so sorry to do this," you tell them it's unfair.
❌ Don't over-explain. Confidence is quiet. A paragraph of justification reads as guilt.
❌ Don't negotiate against yourself before they even respond.
Here's a script that works. "Starting [date], our rate moves to [new price]. The value we deliver has grown, and this keeps us able to deliver it at the level you expect. Nothing changes on your end except the invoice. I wanted you to hear it from me first."
That's it. Send it. Then sit on your hands and let them respond.
The phases change the conversation
Where you are in the 8 Phases of Scale changes how you handle this.
➡️ Creator and Hustler ($0–$250K): You're afraid to charge because you're still proving the offer. Raise prices in small steps and let early wins build your nerve. Underpricing here becomes a habit that haunts you for years if you let it.
➡️ Operator and Leader ($250K–$1M): This is where pricing discipline separates the businesses that cross $1M from the ones that stall. You can't grow a team on thin margins. A 10% increase here often funds your first real hire.
➡️ Architect and Optimizer ($1M–$10M): Now pricing is a system, not a one-time conversation. You're building annual increases into contracts and segmenting clients by value. The fear is gone. The structure replaces it.
What you let go of to move forward is the belief that low price is what keeps clients. It isn't. Value keeps clients. Price is what keeps you in business long enough to deliver it.
The Coaching Corner
If you coach, consult, or work as a fractional leader, this one is personal.
You're the worst at this. I'll say it plainly because I've lived it. The people who help owners price with confidence are often terrified to do it themselves. You'll tell a client to raise rates 20% and then renew your own engagement at the same number you charged three years ago.
Your price is a signal. When you raise it, you tell the market your work is worth more, and the right clients believe you. The clients who only hired you because you were cheap were never going to refer you, never going to implement, and never going to stay. Let them go.
For my Coach Partners at My Biz Coaches, here's the pattern I've seen across 30+ coaches: the ones who raise their rates attract more serious clients, not fewer. Serious clients want a serious investment. A low price scares off the exact buyer you want.
Run your own numbers this week. Then practice the script on yourself before you hand it to a client.
This bridges the gap between knowing and doing. You already know you're underpriced. The question is whether you'll have the conversation this month or absorb another year of quiet pay cuts.
A 10% increase won't lose you the clients you want to keep. It'll just stop costing you the income you've already earned.
To Your Success,
Eric T. Whitmoyer, Business Growth Strategist
Founder & CEO at MyBizCoaches.com
Host of The Biz Coach Show
From Startup to Exit, We're There for Your Biggest Decisions
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