Wow. But why? One reason is that women undercharge. Not surprising really since women tend to find money conversations and pricing harder than men.
There’s plenty of research on salary negotiations in the workplace and salary comparisons that bear this out.
Back to pricing.
What makes it hard?
Why do women undercharge?
Here are some thoughts to consider:
Limiting beliefs get in the way.
Do these sound familiar? If so it’s time to catch yourself and question your fears.
Another challenge is self-doubt or lack of confidence.
So you might think:
Undercutting “the market price” is a bad strategy. There’s an erroneous belief that charging less than others is a brilliant way to gain more clients.
Yes it may bring you clients but some say the ‘cheapskate’ client is often the most picky.
Your low price may communicate that you are inexperienced or not much good. Or that your business is struggling. None of these are helpful. Confidence is everything in business, as anyone who follows the stock market knows.
What to do instead
I recommend these as first steps:
Alison Haill is an Executive Business Coach running her own coaching business for the last 25 years, Alison knows what works in business today. It worked for her coaching practice during COVID too, and for the women in her ‘Charge What You’re Worth And Get It’ groups. It wasn’t always like this though. At one point after years of struggle, she knew she had to give up or change. She chose to change and invested £££s to learn from business and marketing experts. Distilling the essence of that learning and combining it with her own practical business experience, Alison has created a system that works for her own business and works for other women coaches, consultants and trainers too.