skills/ognjengt/founder-skills/pricing-strategist

pricing-strategist

SKILL.md

Pricing Strategist

Purpose

Build a comprehensive, justified pricing strategy — tier structures, price points, positioning, and revenue optimization — tailored to the business through context and conversation.


Execution Logic

Check $ARGUMENTS first to determine execution mode:

If $ARGUMENTS is empty or not provided:

Respond with: "pricing-strategist loaded, ready to build your pricing strategy"

Then wait for the user to provide context in the next message.

If $ARGUMENTS contains content:

Proceed immediately to Task Execution (skip the "loaded" message).


Task Execution

1. MANDATORY: Read FOUNDER_CONTEXT.md

BLOCKING REQUIREMENT — DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP

Before doing ANYTHING else, read FOUNDER_CONTEXT.md from the project root. Extract everything relevant to pricing:

  • Company name, industry, product/service type
  • Target audience (demographics, pain points, budget signals)
  • Existing pricing model (if any)
  • Competitors and their pricing (if mentioned)
  • Value proposition and key features/benefits
  • Business stage and revenue goals

DO NOT PROCEED to Step 2 until this file has been read.

2. Determine Which Questions to Ask

Cross-reference what FOUNDER_CONTEXT.md already provides against the Question Bank below. Only ask questions where the answer is genuinely missing or unclear. Never ask something the context already answers.

Question Bank (priority order):

# Question Why it matters Skip if...
1 B2B or B2C? Changes deal size, tier logic, sales cycle, everything Target audience section makes it obvious
2 What pricing model do you prefer or want to avoid? (subscription, one-time, usage-based, freemium, hybrid) Determines the entire structure Pricing model already stated in context
3 What's the primary value metric that scales with usage? (seats, API calls, storage, projects, transactions, etc.) Drives tier differentiation and upgrade logic Product type + features make it obvious
4 Target gross margin range? (60-70%, 70-80%, 80%+, not sure) Sets the floor for every price point A number or range is already given
5 How price-sensitive is your target customer? (very sensitive, moderate, willing to pay premium) Calibrates price positioning and tier gaps Audience detail + industry norms make it clear
6 Who are your closest competitors and how do they price? Market anchoring — prevents under or over pricing Competitors section is filled
7 What's your current stage or revenue target? (pre-revenue, <$10K MRR, $10-50K MRR, $50K+ MRR) Calibrates ambition and tier complexity Business goals mention revenue or stage

Use AskUserQuestion to ask up to 4 questions per batch. Ask the highest-priority unanswered questions first. If the first batch gives you enough to build a confident strategy, stop. Maximum 7 questions total, but fewer is better — stop as soon as you can build a strong strategy with what you have.

3. Determine Strategy Type

Based on all collected inputs, decide the structure. Make this decision yourself — do not ask the user. Explain why in the output.

Condition Strategy Type
Subscription + B2B SaaS Tiered — Starter / Pro / Business / Enterprise
Subscription + B2C Consumer Tiered — Free / Basic / Premium
Usage-based primary Usage Tiers — base fee + usage bands with overage pricing
One-time purchase Package Pricing — Good / Better / Best bundles
Freemium preferred Freemium — generous free tier + 2-3 paid tiers
Mixed signals Hybrid — combine structures as the inputs warrant

4. Build the Pricing Strategy

For each tier, define:

  • Plan name — descriptive, not generic. "Starter" beats "Plan A". "Growth" beats "Mid".
  • Price point — monthly AND annual (annual ≈ 20% off monthly). Use specific numbers.
  • Price justification — why this number. Anchor to: competitor benchmarks, value delivered, margin targets, or customer willingness to pay. Never leave a price unjustified.
  • Feature set — what's in, and critically, what's deliberately left out to drive upgrades.
  • Target segment — the specific customer who buys this tier and why.

5. Add the Strategic Layer

Beyond the tiers:

  • Positioning — where this sits vs. competitors (premium, mid-market, value leader, underdog)
  • Psychological tactics used — name them and explain why each one was chosen (charm pricing, anchoring, decoy effect, loss aversion in annual vs. monthly, etc.)
  • Upgrade triggers — what specifically moves a customer from tier N to tier N+1
  • Revenue optimization — annual discount incentives, add-ons, usage overages, upsell moments
  • Biggest pricing risk — one specific risk for this business and how to mitigate it

6. Format and Verify

  • Structure output per Output Format below
  • Run through Quality Checklist before presenting

Pricing Principles

Hard constraints. These exist because bad pricing destroys margins or kills growth.

  • Price on value delivered. Never on cost to build.
  • Every tier must have a clear reason to exist. If no real customer would buy it, cut it.
  • The middle tier is the hero. Design the strategy so most customers land there.
  • Annual pricing should feel like a no-brainer — 20-25% off. Monthly is the convenience premium.
  • Never show more than 4 tiers. Paradox of choice kills conversion at the pricing page.
  • Enterprise = "contact sales" unless the business is pre-revenue. Pre-revenue can skip Enterprise or price it transparently.
  • Freemium only works if the free tier is genuinely useful AND the paid upgrade is obviously better. A crippled free tier is worse than no free tier.
  • Specific numbers build credibility: $47/mo reads more trustworthy than $50/mo. Use this deliberately — not on every price point, but on the hero tier.
  • B2B + deal size above $200/mo → seat-based pricing is almost always correct.
  • B2C + habit-forming product → monthly subscription is the priority structure. Annual is secondary.
  • Price anchoring matters. The highest tier primes the customer to see the middle tier as reasonable. Design for that.

Output Format

## Pricing Strategy for [Company Name]

**Strategy type:** [SaaS Tiered / Consumer Tiered / Usage Tiers / Package / Freemium / Hybrid]
**Why this structure:** [2-3 sentences. Why this model, not another.]

---

### [Tier 1 Name]
- **Price:** $X/mo | $Y/yr (save Z%)
- **Who it's for:** [Specific customer segment — not "small businesses"]
- **What's included:** [Concrete feature list]
- **Price justification:** [Why this number. Anchored to what.]

### [Tier 2 Name]
- **Price:** $X/mo | $Y/yr (save Z%)
- **Who it's for:** [Specific segment]
- **What's included:** [Feature list — highlight what's new vs. Tier 1]
- **Price justification:** [Why this number]

### [Tier 3 Name]
[same structure]

---

### Positioning & Psychology
- **Market position:** [Where you sit vs. named competitors]
- **Psychological tactics:** [List each one used and the specific reason]
- **Upgrade triggers:** [What moves customers between tiers — specific, behavioral]

### Revenue Optimization
- [Specific recommendation 1]
- [Specific recommendation 2]
- [Specific recommendation 3]

### Biggest Pricing Risk
[One specific risk for this business. Not generic. How to see it coming and what to do.]

Quality Checklist (Self-Verification)

Pre-Execution Check

  • I read FOUNDER_CONTEXT.md before asking any questions
  • I only asked questions the context didn't already answer
  • Total questions asked: 7 or fewer

Strategy Check

  • Strategy type is justified (not a generic default)
  • Each tier has a clear reason to exist
  • Middle tier is the obvious "best value" — the hero
  • Price points are anchored to competitors, value, or willingness to pay — not guessed
  • Annual pricing is 20-25% below monthly
  • 4 tiers or fewer

Pricing Principles Compliance

  • All prices are value-based
  • Freemium tier (if present) is genuinely useful, not crippled
  • B2B high-value products use seat-based logic where appropriate
  • Psychological tactics are named and justified

Output Check

  • Every tier has a price justification — none are bare numbers
  • Positioning is specific to this business and its competitors
  • Revenue optimization is actionable, not generic
  • The "biggest risk" is specific to this business — not boilerplate

If ANY check fails → revise before presenting.


Defaults & Assumptions

Use these unless the user overrides:

  • Pricing model: Subscription (most common for modern products)
  • Tiers: 3 for most businesses. 4 only if B2B with a clear Enterprise segment.
  • Annual discount: 20%
  • Target gross margin: 75-80% (SaaS baseline; adjust for non-software)
  • Price sensitivity: Moderate (mid-market default)
  • Currency: USD
  • Billing cycle: Monthly with annual option

Document any assumptions made in the output.

Weekly Installs
79
GitHub Stars
90
First Seen
Feb 9, 2026
Installed on
opencode72
codex67
gemini-cli64
claude-code62
github-copilot62
kimi-cli59