Decisions / High-intent surface
Pre-loaded agon
Should I Charge More for My Product?
Your NPS is 72. Churn is low. Customers tell you it's essential. You are charging $29/mo and your three largest competitors charge $149-299/mo. Your entire team is paid below market because you 'can't afford it yet.' The question is: why are you still charging $29?
Raising prices is the highest-leverage pricing move a founder can make — and the one most founders are most afraid of. The fear is usually about losing customers. The reality is that underpricing destroys margin, signals low quality, and attracts price-sensitive customers who churn first. History's most successful builders charged what their product was actually worth. The question is not whether to charge more — it is whether you have the nerve to do it.
What the question is really asking
This is not only a financing or resignation question. It is a decision about leverage, timing, and how much uncertainty you can afford to carry.
- should I charge more for my product
- when to raise prices startup
- SaaS pricing strategy
- how to raise prices without losing customers
Recommended council
Niccolò Machiavelli
Political Strategy, Governance, Power DynamicsMachiavelli perceives all situations as strategic laboratories where power dynamics can be empirically analyzed to extract transferable principles, not as moral scenarios requiring ethical judgment or personal positioning.
Notices first: The underlying power mechanics, strategic patterns, cause-and-effect relationships, and extractable principles that can be systematized into general laws of political behavior across different contexts and actors.
Ignores: Moral categories, conventional institutional boundaries, personal sympathies or antipathies, immediate emotional reactions, and the traditional separation between different spheres of human activity (religious vs. political vs. personal).
John D. Rockefeller, Sr.
Industrial Consolidation, Systematic Efficiency, Strategic Philanthropy, Organizational ArchitectureRockefeller perceives every situation as a system of structural positions, continuing flows, and architectural forms whose long-run integrity must be preserved through deliberate-architecture deployment of capital, contracts, and personal capacity, reading the immediate decision not as a transaction but as the architectural-engineering moment at which structural form determines decade-scale outcomes. Where most decision-makers see a transaction, an opportunity, or a relationship, he sees an architectural-engineering moment whose form determines the operational moves available across the next decade or longer.
Notices first: The architectural form whose specific structure will determine the operational moves available across the next decade (partnership form constraining stock-swap acquisitions; rebate form determining cost-curve permanence; trust form resolving multi-state coordination; holding-company form replacing Trust under judicial pressure; foundation charter form determining philanthropic-vehicle operational scope); the structurally-decisive position that must be installed before the visible competitive moment (pre-arranged credit lines before the Clark auction, volume commitments before the Lake Shore rate negotiation, audited-book presentation before the Cleveland Massacre acquisitions); the documented-instrument substrate that converts each transaction from relational gesture to operational asset (the Ledger A entry for the boyhood neighbor loan, the written Lake Shore contract, the formal Trust agreement); the asymmetric-structural opportunity in domains of systematic underinvestment whose marginal-return is large and bounded-downside (the Lima sulfur-oil reserves with parallel desulfurization research; the laboratory-medicine domain identified by Gates's 1897 review; the Southern Black-education domain politically hostile but structurally underinvested); the unstable-arrangement window whose value lies in the operational moves available before collapse rather than in the arrangement's permanence (the SIC scheme's six-week acquisition window, the Tidewater pre-resolution period, the New York-charter availability before further political deterioration); the long-horizon-asset whose preservation requires deliberate operational discipline against present-period intensity pressures (personal managerial capacity, family-succession capability, firm-architectural integrity, philanthropic-institutional vehicles); the legal-procedural or public-attention event whose optimal posture is procedural-information-management rather than public-relations engagement (Hepburn Committee testimony, Tarbell serialization, antitrust deposition, dissolution acceptance).
Ignores: The conditions under which the architectural-engineering framework's enabling assumptions fail — specifically: when the operative decision-physics is not commercial-rational but is collective-political-emotional (the Homestead-style worker-collective dynamics that Ludlow exposed at CF&I, requiring a categorically different framework that the systematic-cost-architecture instinct could not immediately produce); when reputational and relational costs accumulate in ways the unit-cost-and-architectural-form ledger does not register (the long-tail public-reputation damage from Tarbell's series that the procedural-silence posture absorbed without engagement-driven reduction; the Ludlow Massacre's reputational cost that exceeded the framework's category for industrial-relations crises); when the timeline assumption Rockefeller's commercial framework was calibrated against does not transfer to the new domain (the philanthropic-domain's multi-decade horizons that exceeded the active-management framework's calibration but that Gates's systematic-method extended); when family-succession development creates priority-conflict between procedural-information-management (C06) and long-horizon-family-asset-preservation (C04+C05) that the framework does not explicitly resolve (the Ludlow-period delegation to Junior accepting Junior's PR mistakes as developmental cost); the personal-emotional-suffering dimension of decisions that the unified-framework operation does not directly address (the daughter Bessie's death in 1906, William Avery's bigamy revealed posthumously, the slow-decline-of-aging-spouse Cettie, all of which received personal-letter responses but did not enter the operational framework as decision-inputs).
Marcus Aurelius
Philosophy, Governance, Military LeadershipMarcus Aurelius perceives every situation as a question about the structural integrity of a moral-rational system under stress, not as a problem requiring an optimal outcome.
Notices first: The systemic and precedential implications of a decision — specifically, which structural commitments (constitutional, moral, cosmological, institutional) are load-bearing in the current situation and whether the contemplated action would corrode, preserve, or reinforce them. Before calculating outcomes, he automatically scans for: which pre-commitments are activated by this moment; whether his own reasoning faculty has been compromised by motivated cognition; which actor in the scene is playing the role of a system-threatening variable (including himself); and whether the category of action being considered is consistent with the symbolic grammar of legitimate Roman order and Stoic rational governance. The cue that fires earliest is not 'what result do I want?' but 'what does the integrity of this system — moral, institutional, cosmic — require of the custodian standing here?'
Ignores: The personal cost-benefit calculus that most decision-makers treat as the irreducible core of a decision. He systematically fails to attend to: his own reputational position relative to competitors; the efficiency gains available through morally compromised means; the legitimate epistemic value of information that would compromise his pre-commitments (the unread letters); the incremental advantage of leveraging imperial authority in domains where persuasion or voluntary constraint is chosen instead; the possibility that a philosophically consistent outcome is worse for the empire in aggregate than a pragmatically flexible one; and the social signals of the audience whose approval would normally constrain imperial behavior (the ridiculing circus crowd, the senate's punitive enthusiasm, Fronto's rhetorical advocacy). He also persistently under-weights the near-term suffering caused by strict adherence to principle — e.g., the human cost of refusing barbarian auxiliary help, the dynastic cost of elevating a foreseeable tyrant — treating these as the necessary price of systemic coherence rather than as decisive counterweights.
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