May 25, 2026pricingexperiment

Dropped the flagship retainer from $7.5k to $3k/mo

90-day experiment. The math still works, the close rate should be 3x easier.

I just cut my flagship retainer in half. Operations Tier went from $25k setup + $7,500/mo to $5k setup + $3,000/mo.

It's a 90-day experiment. Here's why.

What I was seeing

The old number was theoretically correct: replace three hires at $170k total, charge $90k/yr, save the buyer $80k. Beautiful math. The problem was the math didn't fit the budget.

Most of my K-W market — contractors, machine shops, staffing agencies — can authorize $15-25k without a board meeting. $90k/yr triggers a "we need to think about this" that becomes a "we'll circle back next quarter" that becomes never. The pricing was anchored on what the offer was worth, not on what could close.

The new shape

  • $5,000 setup. $3,000/mo after. Year one total: $41,000.
  • Still 12-month minimum, still refundable through month 1.
  • Still includes all 9 agents, a Web 10-tier launch site, monthly optimization, quarterly war-room, my direct line.

The math the buyer hears now: "Less than the cost of one junior hire — for more output than three." That's a 30-second sale, not a 30-day decision.

What I'm giving up

To hit $1M/yr at the old price I needed ~12 clients on retainer. At the new price I need ~25. That's the trade — more clients to manage, but vastly more closeable per call.

Solo I cap around 15-20 clients before I need a junior anyway. So the real ceiling shifted from "wealthy in 7 years" to "wealthy in 10, but I might actually get there because I can sell at this price."

What I'm watching

Three signals over 90 days:

  1. Close rate on discovery calls. Old: ~10%. Target: 25-30%.
  2. Sales cycle length. Old: 30-60 days. Target: 7-14.
  3. Cancellation rate at month 6. Old: unknown (only had one retainer client). Target: under 15%.

If close rate triples and cancellations stay under 15%, the new price is right. If close rate doesn't move, it means the offer itself isn't landing — and the price wasn't the problem.

What I told the existing customer

The one client already on the $7,500/mo retainer got a phone call this morning. I dropped his price retroactively to $3,000/mo, effective immediately. No quibbling, no "we'll grandfather you at the old price."

The framing: "I priced this wrong. The new number is what makes the math work for businesses your size. I want you to feel like you're paying me what I'm worth — not what I was hoping for."

He laughed. Said most agencies he's worked with raise prices on existing clients to fund new ones. Then he asked if I wanted to take on his sister's business too.

That's the only revenue-positive lesson I'm taking out of today. Drop the price publicly, surprise the customer privately, get referred immediately.

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