No one will ever pay you
what you're worth.
No one will ever pay you
what you're worth.
They'll only ever pay you
what they think you're worth,
and you control their thinking,
not like this,
although that would be cool.
(Laughter)
That would be really cool.
Instead, like this:
clearly defining and communicating
your value are essential
to being paid well for your excellence.
Anyone here want to be paid well?
Okay, good,
then this talk is for everyone.
It's got universal applicability.
It's true if you're a business owner,
if you're an employee,
if you're a job seeker.
It's true if you're a man or a woman.
Now, I approach this today through
the lens of the woman business owner,
because in my work I've observed
that women underprice
more so than men.
The gender wage gap is
a well-traveled narrative in this country.
According to the Bureau
of Labor Statistics,
a woman employee earns
just 83 cents for every
dollar a man earns.
What may surprise you
is that this trend continues
even into the entrepreneurial sphere.
A woman business owner earns just
80 cents for every dollar a man earns.
In my work, I've often heard women
express that they're uncomfortable
communicating their value,
especially early on in business ownership.
They say things like,
"I don't like to toot my own horn."
"I'd rather let the work
speak for itself."
"I don't like to sing my own praises."
I hear very different narratives
in working with male business owners,
and I think this difference is costing
women 20 cents on the dollar.
I'd like to tell you the story
of a consulting firm
that helps their clients dramatically
improve their profitability.
That company is my company.
After my first year in business,
I saw the profit increases
that my clients were realizing
in working with me,
and I realized that I needed
to reevaluate my pricing.
I was really underpriced relative
to the value I was delivering.
It's hard for me to admit to you,
because I'm a pricing consultant.
(Laughter)
It's what I do.
I help companies price for value,
but nonetheless, it's what I saw,
and so I sat down
to evaluate my pricing, evaluate my value,
and I did that by asking
key value questions.
What are my clients' needs
and how do I meet them?
What is my unique skill set that makes me
better qualified to serve my clients?
What do I do that no one else does?
What problems do I solve for clients?
What value do I add?
I answered these questions
and defined the value that my clients
get from working with me,
calculated their return on investment,
and what I saw was that I needed
to double my price,
double it.
Now I confess to you, this terrified me.
I'm supposed to be the expert in this,
but I'm not cured.
I knew the value was there.
I was convinced the value was there,
and I was still scared out of my wits.
What if nobody would pay me that?
What if clients said, "That's ridiculous.
You're ridiculous."
Was I really worth that?
Not my work, mind you, but me.
Was I worth that?
I'm the mother of two beautiful
little girls who depend upon me.
I'm a single mom.
What if my business fails?
What if I fail?
But I know how to take my own medicine,
the medicine that I
prescribe to my clients.
I had done the homework.
I knew the value was there.
So when prospects came,
I prepared the proposals
with the new higher pricing
and sent them out
and communicated the value.
How's the story end?
Clients continued to hire me
and refer me and recommend me,
and I'm still here.
And I share this story because
doubts and fears
are natural and normal.
They don't define our value,
and they shouldn't limit
our earning potential.
I'd like to share another story,
about a woman who learned
to communicate her value
and found her own voice.
She runs a successful
web development company
and employees several people.
When she first started her firm,
and for several years thereafter,
she would say, "I have a little
web design company."
She'd actually use
those words with clients.
"I have a little web design company."
In this and in many other small ways,
she was diminishing her company
in the eyes of prospects and clients,
and diminishing herself.
It was really impacting her ability
to earn what she was worth.
I believe her language and her style
communicated that she didn't believe
she had much value to offer.
In her own words, she was practically
giving her services away.
And so she began her journey
to take responsibility
for communicating value to clients
and changing her message.
One thing I shared with her
is that it's so important
to find your own voice,
a voice that's authentic and true to you.
Don't try to channel your sister-in-law
just because she's a great salesperson
or your neighbor who tells a great joke
if that's not who you are.
Give up this notion
that it's tooting your own horn.
Make it about the other party.
Focus on serving and adding value,
and it won't feel like bragging.
What do you love about what you do?
What excites you about
the work that you do?
If you connect with that, communicating
your value will come naturally.
So she embraced her natural style,
found her voice, and changed her message.
For one thing, she stopped calling herself
a little web design company.
She really found a lot of strength
and power in communicating her message.
She's now charging three times
as much for web design
and her business is growing.
She told me about a recent meeting with
a gruff and sometimes difficult client
who had called a meeting questioning
progress on search engine optimization.
She said in the old days,
that would have been
a really intimidating meeting for her,
but her mindset was different.
She said, she prepared the information,
sat down with the client,
said this isn't about me,
it's not personal,
it's about the client.
She took them through the data,
through the numbers,
laid out the trends and the progress
in her own voice and in her own way,
but very directly said,
"Here's what we've done for you."
The client sat up and took notice,
and said, "Okay, I got it."
And she said in describing that meeting,
"I didn't feel scared or panicky
or small, which is how I used to feel.
Instead I feel like, okay, I got this.
I know what I'm doing. I'm confident."
Being properly valued is so important.
You can hear in this story
that the implications range
far beyond just finances
into the realm of self-respect
and self-confidence.
Today I've told two stories,
one about defining our value
and the other about
communicating our value,
and these are the two elements
to realizing our full earning potential.
That's the equation.
And if you're sitting
in the audience today,
and you're not being paid
what you're worth,
I'd like to welcome you
into this equation.
Just imagine what life could be like,
how much more we could do,
how much more we could give back,
how much more we
could plan for the future,
how validated and respected we would feel
if we could earn our full potential,
realize our full value.
No one will ever pay you
what you're worth.
They'll only ever pay you
what they think you're worth,
and you control their thinking.
Thank you.
(Applause)