Most people think something is "too expensive," but the truth is—there’s no such thing. It’s all about relative value.
Consider this:
But when it comes to investing ₹3L in a program that could 10x their income? Suddenly, it's "too expensive."
The problem isn’t the price—it’s the positioning.
When someone says something is expensive, they’re really saying: "I don’t see enough value compared to my other options."
Here’s a simple way to handle price objections:
Ask: "Expensive compared to what?"
Let them reveal their reference point. Then, reframe the discussion around ROI instead of cost.
Example:
Client: "₹3.5L is too expensive."
You: "Interesting—compared to what?"
Client: "Other coaching programs that charge ₹80K."
Now, instead of discussing price, you’re talking about return on investment.
A ₹2L program that helps generate ₹20L in revenue?
A ₹10L program that leads to ₹2Cr in growth?
Suddenly, ₹10L seems like a steal.
Most businesses make this mistake:
They try to be the cheapest. But the market doesn’t reward the cheapest—it rewards the most valuable.
In high-ticket sales, you’re not selling a price. You’re selling a transformation.
Your pricing reflects your positioning: