Elements of Value

This post introduces a new sequence about Elements of Value.  It is based on Maslow’s hierarchy of needs; a version I have mentioned in passing, see What do People Want that introduces Elements of Value.

Setting Your Price

Setting your price is an art.  Too high and people don’t believe it reflects the value of your offer and too low, you don’t cover your costs.

There are other things to consider besides cost and value.  For example, you may introduce low price offers to prove your value, establish your reputation, etc.  There are pros and cons to all of these.

However, in this post I focus on costs and value to the customer.  Generally customer bears their costs unless you choose to meet them.  Value, if you show it in advance, tends to support increases in your price.

Remember though, there are no set rules.

What are Costs?

Costs to the customer can massively exceed the price.   There are several ways this might work.  For example, you offer a course and ask your customer to purchase a text-book.  You don’t have to do this, eg you could offer a copy of the book as a bonus.  You might choose to supply essential texts and leave it for the customer to decide about supporting texts.

If you supply the text-book, you add its price to your costs.  This expense may be so low compared with your profit on the deal, it makes little difference financially.  But presented as a bonus it adds value to your offer.

Other costs are harder to assuage.  If you are a coach or consultant, your customer will need to invest time in preparation for meetings.  Your prospect must understand their contribution to your effectiveness in advance.  Your customer’s time is valuable and a few hours’ work can add to the overall cost.  You reduce this by ensuring preparatory work is relevant, provide support, etc.

If you are alert to the costs to the customer, you can manage them together and show how they contribute to the value of the offer.

What is Value?

So, the costs, whether borne by you or your client tend to hold prices down.  Your prospect compares perceived costs with perceived value.  They are unlikely to buy if costs outweigh value.

It is not a good idea to hide the costs to the client.  The costs to the client are the contribution they make to the success of your joint enterprise.

Let’s say the cost to the client is 3 hours’ work a week.  This work is essential and so the client must know about it before they buy your offer.  If they are aware and do not do the work, then you can discuss what you can do together given they have already acknowledged the need for the work.

The temptation might be to reflect these costs in your prices.  However, this is not a good idea for several reasons.  If you cut your prices, you need more clients and these take up more time, reducing the value of your support because you have to spread it more thinly.  Worse though, the costs to your clients are likely to increase with the value of your offer.  A higher value offer makes greater demands on your client.  If you cut prices for every increase in value, you have no incentive to develop high-end offers!

The solution is to increase the value to your clients.  If the perceived value is worth the effort, they are likely to opt for your offer.  If they want it enough, they will find the money.

Elements of Value

If you follow the link to the Elements of Value, you see 30 suggestions.  One of them is making money.  That leaves 29 other elements.

You can offer more than one Element of Value and some will be easier for you than others.  Bain offers 4 levels of value and from lowest to highest, here they are:

  • Functional 14
  • Emotional 10
  • Life Changing 5
  • Social impact 1

As this is based on Maslow’s triangle, the idea is you need to meet needs at a lower level before you move to the next.  So, you need to meet some of functional needs before you start on the emotional.  And so on.

Perhaps you need to offer value at all four levels to make a high value offer.  This suggests a belt and braces approach to life.  Get the foundations in place and build the higher values on the foundations.

However, this conceals a disadvantage.  It lacks vision.  If you have no sense of the social impact you intend, how can you know which foundational value you need?  Many people know the changes they want to see and need to work out the values they need from lower down the triangle.

This is why my listing of the 4 levels is upside-down.    It is possible to build a business, see where it takes you and then decide upon social impact.  But many people set out with a vision and must back-fill the other values they need to meet that vision.

This is why over the next 30 weeks I shall start with social impact and work down the triangle, exploring each level in turn.  Starting from the top suggests a strategic approach.  It is for those who know the change they want to see and seek the other values they need to get to their goal.

Two Final Points

First, it is possible to start lower down.  Life changing goals are fine and may provide the strategic goal you need.  Once you meet this goal, you may find a social impact goal appears naturally.

And for those who worry about making a profit, remember: if you want to help more people, you need to be financially successful.  This is about becoming successful enough to carry out your social impact goals.

This is the first of 31 posts about Elements of Value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  Access previous posts in this sequence below:

  • Social impact: next – self-transcendance

  • Life Changing 5

  • Emotional 10

  • Functional 14

Click to share this post!

About the Author

I've been a community development worker since the early 1980s in Tyneside, Teesside and South Yorkshire. I've also worked nationally for the Methodist Church for eight years supporting community projects through the church's grants programme. These days I am developing an online community development practice combining non-directive consultancy, strategic management, participatory methods and development work online and offline. If you're interested contact me for a free consultation.

Leave a Reply 26 comments

How Self-Transcendence Enhances Value - Community Web Consultancy - January 15, 2018 Reply

[…] first Element of Value is key to the others.  Self-transcendence is the only Social Impact Element and the only one where […]

Does Your Offer Provide Hope? - Community Web Consultancy - January 22, 2018 Reply

[…] is the third of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

How to Promote Self-Actualisation - Community Web Consultancy - January 29, 2018 Reply

[…] is the fourth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Provide an Heirloom for the Next Generation - Community Web Consultancy - February 12, 2018 Reply

[…] the five life changing elements of value, this one is perhaps most distinct.  The focus is on an heirloom for future generations and not so […]

What to do to Reduce Anxiety - Market Together Blog - February 26, 2018 Reply

[…] on with Elements of Value, from life changing to emotional values.  As we descend Bain’s pyramid, the scope of these […]

Generosity and Rewards for Clients - Market Together Blog - March 5, 2018 Reply

[…] is the ninth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Nostalgia: Remembering the Past - Market Together Blog - March 12, 2018 Reply

[…] is the tenth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Design or Aesthetics? - Market Together Blog - March 19, 2018 Reply

[…] is the eleventh of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

How Badge Value Conveys Status - Market Together Blog - March 26, 2018 Reply

[…] is the twelfth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Marketing Physical and Mental Well-Being - Market Together Blog - April 2, 2018 Reply

[…] is the thirteenth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

How to Market Therapeutic Value - Market Together Blog - April 9, 2018 Reply

[…] my last post about Elements of Value, I described the value of well-being.  Perhaps a more obvious value is where health–related […]

How to Find Entertainment in Your Offer - Market Together Blog - April 16, 2018 Reply

[…] is the fifteenth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Marketing Attractiveness - Market Together Blog - April 23, 2018 Reply

[…] is another element of value that enhances status.  But what is […]

How a Good Offer Saves Time - Market Together Blog - May 7, 2018 Reply

[…] we move from Emotional to Functional Elements of Value.  This is the lowest level of Bain’s version of Maslow’s triangle.  The idea is to have […]

Offers that Reduce Complexity and Simplify - Market Together Blog - May 14, 2018 Reply

[…] is the nineteenth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Offers that Make Money - Market Together Blog - May 21, 2018 Reply

[…] isn’t this the popular element of value?  Is yours one of those offers that make money for clients?  Take care when making this […]

Making an Offer that Reduces Risk - Market Together Blog - May 28, 2018 Reply

[…] is the twenty-first of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

How Getting Organised Benefits Your Clients - Market Together Blog - June 4, 2018 Reply

[…] is the twenty-second of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  Access posts from this […]

How Your Offer Integrates Products and Services - Market Together Blog - June 11, 2018 Reply

[…] survey of functional elements of value, considers practical aspects of products or services.  One challenge is to show what integrates […]

How to Market Connection - Market Together Blog - June 18, 2018 Reply

[…] element of value brings people together by making a […]

How Does Your Offer Reduce Effort? - Market Together Blog - June 25, 2018 Reply

[…] is the twenty-fifth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Delivering Quality to Your Customers - Market Together Blog - July 16, 2018 Reply

[…] is the twenty-eighth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

How Does Variety Sell? - Market Together Blog - July 23, 2018 Reply

[…] is the twenty-ninth of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

How’s Your Sensory Appeal? - Market Together Blog - July 30, 2018 Reply

[…] appeal is another functional element of value.  It applies to both products and […]

How to Make an Offer that Informs Your Clients - Market Together Blog - August 6, 2018 Reply

[…] is the thirty-first of 31 posts about elements of value.  Make sure you don’t miss any by signing up for the offer below.  The posts in this sequence […]

Using Elements of Value - Market Together Blog - August 13, 2018 Reply

[…] the last 30 weeks, I have posted about elements of value.  There are probably many more but the point is: what are the things your customers value?  Do […]

Leave a Reply: