| Some general points/comments. 1. Most new developers/entrepreneurs always under price their product/service. If you are new to this and the price feels a little uncomfortable you are probably getting closer to its real value. 2. Discounting screams you don't know the value of your product/service. Try not to "discount" your product/service, instead A/B testing is smarter to set some parameters. Also, I'd second what taprun says on discounts too in his comment. 3. Set your pricing not based on what the service costs you to operate, develop, maintain etc. Set your pricing based on the value you provide to the client. 4. Don't immediately reach change the price when you are starting out. Evaluate everything equally to price, it may be who you are marketing to, product/market fit etc. And much of that is far more impactful than just price alone. 5. Try to keep you pricing scheme simple. The easier it is to understand the better. Ideally I like to see at most 3-4 "levels" of pricing, more than that and users start getting confused what to select and are more likely to bail and not try any of them. 6. Experiment with free trials to see if it may help your conversion rate. I can't say it is ideal in all situations nor does it work in all, but it is worth evaluating. |