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Based on Lenny's Podcast data
Lenny's Knowledge Sketch · Pricing & Monetization

How to Price Your Product
Without Leaving Money on the Table

Naomi Ionita
Partner, Menlo Ventures
Ex-VP Growth, Invoice2go · Ex-Evernote
JAN 12 2023
Core Concept

3 Mistakes Founders Always Make on Pricing

Wait too long to charge at all Underprice + single-tier trap Set it and forget it
"If guilt is one of the main reasons people pay you, your free version is too good — and you are leaving money on the table."
  • Evernote charged $45/yr while power users said they got hundreds of dollars of value
  • True PMF = people opening their wallets, not just using your product
  • Revisit pricing every 6–12 months, just like your roadmap
  • Free beta = an R&D cost, not a permanent business model
Framework

Match Price to Value: The Full Pricing Process

COMMITTEE RESEARCH VAN WEST. LAUNCH DAY 1 FEATURES aha moment — free / starter DAY 100 FEATURES scale-dependent — pro / enterprise
  • Pricing committee: cross-functional — product, data, finance, sales. Own it together.
  • Feature ranking: 100-point exercise allocates user attention across feature list → reveals true demand
  • Van Westendorp: 4 survey questions (too cheap / good deal / expensive / prohibitive) map the willingness-to-pay range
  • Day 1 features = aha moment + habit formation → must be free or in starter plan
  • Day 100 features = advanced, data-at-scale → lock behind pro; upsell when users hit quota
50%
of pricing changes → 25%+ ARR lift
monetization improvement vs. acquisition impact
The Envoy Story Larry (Envoy CEO) 10X'd his price mid-sales-meeting on a gut feeling. The prospect said "sure" — zero hesitation. Lesson: no pushback = still underpriced. Target 20–30% of deals lost on price as a healthy signal you've found the ceiling.
The Invoice2go Result By redesigning plans around day-1 vs. day-100 features, Invoice2go doubled upgrade rate from starter to pro — while also raising the pro plan price by 30%. Both improved simultaneously.
Modern Growth Stack

The New Infrastructure for Product-Led Revenue

A play on the Modern Data Stack — the MGS covers what you do with the data to drive growth. Three core pillars:

1. Data — Break the Silos

Reverse ETL tools (Hightouch, Census) sync warehouse data into every team's daily workflow. Business side self-serves without engineering. Activation signals, churn risk, and upgrade signals flow in real time.

2. Workflow — Cross-Functional Execution

Growth is inherently cross-functional. Purpose-built tools replace months of bespoke engineering. Reclaim those sprints for proprietary product features instead of internal tooling for billing or experimentation.

3. Impact — Hard ROI, Both Ways

Automation saves engineering time (cost reduction). Better segmentation and nudges drive upgrades (revenue lift). A dual ROI story is especially powerful in a tight macro environment.

Key Layers in the Stack

  • Product-Led Sales (Endgame, Pocus) — product usage data surfaces upgradable accounts for inside sales. "Free money when you shine a light on an account nobody was watching."
  • Experimentation (Eppo, Amplitude) — tie A/B test results directly to board metrics (revenue, subscriptions) in your warehouse. No more Excel post-analysis in Jupyter notebooks.
  • Usage-Based Billing (Orb, Metronome) — meter consumption, package hybrid fixed + variable plans, forecast revenue. Seat-based incumbents don't serve the usage-based shift well.
  • Generative AI — copilots for marketing copy, SDR outreach, ad creative. Attributable ROI on time saved + campaign performance lifts. The most compelling new layer right now.
"A 1% improvement on monetization drives 4× the bottom-line impact of a 1% improvement on acquisition. Yet most teams obsess over acquisition."
Tactics

Running Pricing Experiments That Actually Work

  • Geo-segment first — test in Canada or Australia before the US rollout. Limits blast radius while generating clean signal on conversion and churn impact.
  • Track long-term cohorts — a year-one discount reveals its true economics only in year two. Don't declare victory on upgrade rate alone.
  • Freemium paywall placement — free must cover the full aha moment and habit formation path. Everything tied to day-100 scale belongs behind the paywall.
  • Keep free users — they collapse CAC by driving organic referrals and shared workflows. Give up short-term revenue, preserve long-term growth loops.
  • Hybrid billing wins — pure usage-based scares CFO buyers who need predictability. A subscription floor with usage quota + overages satisfies both sides.
  • Lose some deals on price — 20–30% lost deals is healthy signal you've found the ceiling. If zero deals are lost on price, you are certainly undercharging.
Evernote Lesson When guilt was the #1 conversion reason, the free plan was too good. Bifurcation fixed it: light users got a low tier, avid users got a high tier that matched their actual willingness to pay.
Contrarian

Pricing Myths That Cost Founders Millions

Free users are just freeloaders INSTEAD → Free users are your CAC engine. Figma gave design away individually and used viral, collaborative workflows to land entire enterprises. The free tier drove the paid tier — don't cut it.
One premium plan keeps it simple INSTEAD → A single tier is a revenue ceiling. Evernote at $45/yr left power users paying 90% below perceived value. Segment by persona — a new user and a daily power user will never justify the same price.
Go pure usage-based — it's the future INSTEAD → Pure consumption billing kills budget predictability for CFOs. Fewer than 5% of SaaS companies run pure usage-based. A hybrid — subscription floor plus usage escalator — satisfies buyers and maximises revenue.
Lock in pricing at launch, then focus on product INSTEAD → Treat pricing like your roadmap — revisit every 6–12 months. Half of companies that do see 25%+ ARR jumps from a single repricing. The most common regret: not doing it sooner.
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