Do we not like the fan noise in the background?
Carlos:Is that your laptop still just about to take off?
Ben:It's been desperate, been trying to take off for years.
Ben:Uh, but it can't seem to get off the stand.
Carlos:So we are going to be talking about, uh, through the lens
Carlos:of Elon Musk's eyes, the scary, scary eyes of Elon Musk, we're
Carlos:gonna talk a bit about pricing.
Carlos:And we are gonna be, uh, sort of commenting on a blog post by a
Carlos:guy called Mark Ritson who I don't really know, but I, his, his blog
Carlos:post was shared by another guy called Tim, who is based in Bryan.
Carlos:And, um, it was curious, he was like, basically the title
Carlos:of the blog post is Five.
Carlos:What is the title of that?
Carlos:Five Lessons on Five Lessons On How Not To Do Pricing From Elon Musk's Twitter.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:So essentially.
Carlos:For those of you who have been living in a cave for the past month,
Carlos:there's a guy called, or maybe the past year or decade, there's a guy
Carlos:called Elon Musk, who I've been watching a documentary on the BBC
Carlos:iPlayer called the Elon Musk Show.
Carlos:Fascinating story, fascinating story about his experience,
Carlos:not only in building Tesla and SpaceX, uh, but also just.
Carlos:Um, well, they don't really talk about PayPal much.
Carlos:That's the interesting thing.
Ben:Couldn't fit it in.
Ben:Too short a program.
Carlos:I don't think many people know that he was actually part of PayPal.
Ben:Yeah.
Carlos:Which is fascinating.
Carlos:But they talk about the company before PayPal.
Ben:Yeah.
Carlos:And they talk about him getting pushed outta PayPal.
Ben:Yeah.
Carlos:But also they talk about his childhood.
Ben:Yeah.
Carlos:And his parents.
Carlos:And that is super fascinating.
Carlos:Anyway, they come up to the idea of buying Twitter, uh, and the.
Carlos:Basically hims, his the power, he has a being having several hundred, I think
Carlos:he's the second most swallowed person on Twitter, over a hundred million
Carlos:followers in influencing markets.
Ben:And he's an influencer.
Carlos:He is a massive, big influencer.
Ben:Yeah.
Carlos:Now he's trying to influence the business model of Twitter and
Carlos:trying to, as I understand it, get it into profitability, which means.
Carlos:Dealing with pricing.
Carlos:And so, um, on this blog post, uh, there were these five things not to do
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:With pricing.
Carlos:And I'm gonna, and, and broadly, and then to my view on it was there's
Carlos:like kind of three aspects to it.
Carlos:There's something around clarity, something around confidence, and
Carlos:something about communication.
Carlos:So, yeah, there, there's something about how clear are the prices that
Carlos:we present, um, how confident are we when we present them, and how
Carlos:do we communicate them in a way that that makes sense, you know,
Carlos:the, you clearly understand it?
Carlos:So the five lessons.
Carlos:Firstly, ignore research, go straight to tactics.
Carlos:That's one lesson not to do.
Carlos:Number two, thing not to do.
Carlos:Ignore strategy and go straight to tactics.
Carlos:Number three, create uncertainty around the price change.
Carlos:Wobble a bit.
Carlos:Number four, don't worry about framing.
Carlos:Just set a price.
Carlos:Number five, value is all about the company, not the customer.
Carlos:Okay.
Carlos:So those are the five things
Ben:Not to do.
Carlos:To give you not to do.
Carlos:Not to do.
Carlos:So I thought we'd just like skip through each one and
Carlos:just give our own commentary.
Carlos:I'll kind of share a little bit.
Carlos:I maybe intro a bit with what Mark was talking about on his blog post.
Carlos:And then maybe you can.
Carlos:Chime in with any thoughts, uh, uh, and your own perspective.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:So, the first thing, and maybe from the perspective of happy
Carlos:pricing, Number one, ignore research.
Carlos:Go straight to tactics.
Carlos:So, um, what he was saying was basically pricing from the gut.
Carlos:Just like, ah, this is a price.
Carlos:And just not even thinking about, uh, asking or talking to anyone.
Carlos:So that's his thing is like, that's what he perceived Elon Musk doing
Carlos:with some of his pricing particularly.
Carlos:And so we're now, just to be clear, uh, for those of you who aren't
Carlos:familiar with Twitter, and I'm not particularly familiar with Twitter,
Carlos:there is a blue tick, which is actually a white circle with a white, a blue
Carlos:circle with a white tick, apparently.
Carlos:Uh, that is a verified user status.
Carlos:So that's to let you know that this person is really who they are, and they,
Carlos:they were wanting to charge $20 for it.
Carlos:Again said out of the blue, and there's other aspects that,
Carlos:the things they wanna charge.
Carlos:So anyway, first thing, giving a price without any research.
Ben:So, yeah, so the context, you said he buys the company
Ben:for a huge amount of money.
Ben:It clearly doesn't make any money, lots of people, whatever, kind of
Ben:contentious for range of things.
Ben:He is then looking at ways of making money.
Ben:Says you should charge for the blue tick, the verified thing says, oh, $20.
Ben:But then in conversation, when he gets some kind of pushback
Ben:on Twitter, basically saying, you know, you can sling it.
Ben:I'm not gonna do that.
Ben:He says, okay, what about eight?
Ben:Um, so the, I think like the five points, one of the, one of the things
Ben:more than I had sort of like specific thoughts about the individual points,
Ben:it kind of felt to me, and in the same way your, your alliteration
Ben:sort of spoke to it, it felt to me that the, the kind of the general.
Ben:Idea that the article was talking about, which is right, is that essentially
Ben:he, Elon Musk did what everybody shouldn't do, which is he basically
Ben:didn't really think about it, didn't think it through, didn't look at it via
Ben:the lens of the person who was buying.
Ben:Didn't, you know, sort of No, no, no plan, no strategy, no
Ben:thinking, no consideration, no care.
Ben:Just wades in and from the gut kind of vomits a figure into the air,
Ben:which of course, given that he is the most kind of followed person
Ben:onto Twitter or whatever it is.
Ben:And also kind of, you know, the man of the moment, everybody kind
Ben:of looks at, vomits a figure into the air, which is kind of quickly
Ben:sort of swatted back at him.
Ben:I mean, even in a sense, I don't even know how roundly
Ben:it was, swatted back him.
Ben:A few people, clearly people he paid attention to swatted it back
Ben:at him and he just responded.
Ben:So it just kind of talks to all of this kind of acting from the gut.
Ben:Not thinking about it.
Ben:And you know, the problem of acting from the gut, like we sort of talk
Ben:about on all the others is that's just loaded with our own sort of
Ben:kind of emotional kind of flavor and judgment about it and then kind of
Ben:reacting to what comes back at you.
Ben:But this whole sort of thing, you know, not thinking, you know, not,
Ben:not thinking about it outside in, which is like one of the ways we
Ben:talk about it on, on the course that you are kind of pricing a little bit
Ben:outside in, you are starting more from the, from the lens, from the
Ben:perspective of the person who is buying.
Ben:It's not just about you vomiting a figure into the air, because almost
Ben:certainly the figure that you are vomiting into the air when you are
Ben:pricing your own thing is one which is kind of clouded by your own
Ben:stories, your own anxieties, your own worries, your own judgments,
Ben:good or bad about what it is that you might, you might be doing.
Ben:So the kind of the danger of doing what he did or kind of going inside out is
Ben:there is no reason to what you're doing.
Ben:There is no, you know, it is, it's not a, a qualified thing.
Ben:There is no ne, you know, you have no idea whether the value of what you are
Ben:talking about is kind of right or wrong.
Ben:Now, for sure, someone like him, I would guess the $20 thing came about
Ben:because you know, he has undoubtedly given that he just bought a company
Ben:for $44 billion, an army of people who were really good with spreadsheets.
Ben:I mean, that's what you would hope and expect if you're doing that.
Ben:And so the army of people who are really good with spreadsheets, no
Ben:doubt, look at the organization, you know, from all the stuff they could
Ben:see and think, well actually, if we could get 20% of the people who have
Ben:a blue tick to pay $20 a month, all of a sudden we'd make all of this money.
Ben:To which he then probably just regurgitates that into the world
Ben:going, okay, well there you go.
Ben:So $20.
Ben:But yeah, it just talks the idea of acting impulsively, acting from the
Ben:gut, acting inside out, and not thinking about or caring about what the person on
Ben:the other side of the table is thinking, doing or wanting, and that that
Ben:essentially is setting yourself up for a kind of period of uncertainty and or
Ben:anxiety and maybe a suboptimal outcome.
Carlos:So there's another aspect, another point or another lesson around,
Carlos:um, uh, that Mark shared was value is all about the company, not the customer.
Ben:Mm.
Carlos:And I'm linking that to what you were saying.
Carlos:'cause there's a, sometimes I, I feel, and we've been guilty of it, about this
Carlos:having a defensive stance about prices.
Carlos:So it's like, oh, I'm charging this much 'cause we need to make some money.
Carlos:You know, it costs us this much and this much and this much and this
Carlos:much to actually make a profit.
Carlos:So, you know, you should pay us because we need to put food on the table.
Carlos:Now on one hand, yeah, that's fair enough.
Carlos:On the other hand, it's like, well, why should I care?
Carlos:Like you are a business.
Carlos:Am I am I, am I a charity?
Carlos:Am I giving you money?
Carlos:Just.
Carlos:That can help.
Carlos:And I've seen it like with models like Patreon and people who just want
Carlos:to support artists to do their work, fine, but there's still some kind
Carlos:of value that people are getting.
Carlos:Not guilt.
Carlos:I'm not trying to get someone to pay you money by through guilt.
Carlos:I feel personally, I find that a bit challenging.
Carlos:Uh, but even just from a purely pricing strategy approach.
Carlos:It's like, well, what is it about the, this customer that,
Carlos:what's the good feeling here?
Carlos:'Cause guild doesn't feel like a very good feeling.
Ben:Mm.
Carlos:So that's, that's what I was picking up on there.
Carlos:So when I'm thinking about pricing from the inside out, it's like
Carlos:if this is this unfiltered, oh, I feel really, really scared.
Carlos:I really feel really, really desperate and I feel really, really, um,
Carlos:needy, can you please pay this price?
Carlos:That's when I think you are, well, you, you are gonna come up with
Carlos:either a, some resistance, uh, at best and ambivalence at worst,
Carlos:maybe someone just, essentially blatantly saying, that's not worth it.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Because you're not talking to me about what I'm getting out of it at all.
Carlos:Um, and, and that's not based on any kind of, uh.
Carlos:At least some kind of understanding or knowledge of who you're selling to.
Ben:Mm-Hmm mm-Hmm.
Carlos:It's all coming from me.
Carlos:I need, I need, I need, I need this much money feed.
Carlos:I need you to pay this much money and I need it to survive.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Please pay.
Ben:I think it's a further, it's like, it's not, it's partly, you
Ben:know, they're not coming at it from a position of knowledge or
Ben:understanding about what me, the kind of customer or client might wanna do.
Ben:But also it sort of talks to a lack of kind of care.
Ben:Actually, I'm not, I don't really care about, um, kind of what's
Ben:happening on the, on the other side of the other side of the table.
Ben:Uh, and that kind of blindness of it really.
Ben:Uh, because yeah, you know, there are two parties in all of these, in
Ben:all of these transactions and better understanding what the, the kind of
Ben:buying party wants and needs and values and sort of judges and all of those
Ben:things will mean you are doing better work and you are also better understand
Ben:what something is worth to them.
Carlos:Well, I think the, the word for me the, the really
Carlos:important word there is care.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Is like, particularly for the work and the kinds of people that
Carlos:we are talking to and surrounding ourselves with and wanting to work
Carlos:with, are people who care about the people, not just the money.
Carlos:And so, in terms of an outside in approach, it's like, I
Carlos:wanna understand these people.
Carlos:I wanna know what they're trying to do.
Carlos:I wanna know what they're struggling with.
Carlos:I wanna know what that means to them so that I can actually help them and I can
Carlos:work out what we're doing with the Happy Pricing course, how much money they're
Carlos:willing to pay for us to help them.
Carlos:And then with the inside out approach, I think what boundaries
Carlos:can I create for myself so that I'm not just pandering to anyone?
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:I have some clear understanding and you talk about the course.
Carlos:What more money, um, could buy me?
Carlos:You know, what are the kind of the minimum, what's the
Carlos:minimum amount of money?
Carlos:I'm willing to, uh, sell my services for?
Carlos:Or what am I willing to give away consciously, not because of I need
Carlos:them, need the client, but because I feel like investing in that person.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Investing my time.
Carlos:There's something, and this is where point lesson two about
Carlos:strategy, I think is interesting.
Carlos:You know, having a strategic understanding of pricing as opposed to
Carlos:just, again, throwing out some prices.
Carlos:Because I think about, when I think about strategic aspect of pricing, the
Carlos:thing that's springing to mind is like, I might have a product or service that
Carlos:I charge 49, 60, 90 $9 in, uh, before, in the past, but actually I'm reducing
Carlos:the price, not because the value is less, because it's a stepping stone
Carlos:to something else that I've created.
Carlos:And so this idea of like thinking about price, not in isolation of the product,
Carlos:but in terms of, in this case, when I think about strategy, what's the
Carlos:bigger journey, or the longer journey that my customers potentially go on?
Carlos:And so I'm pricing not only based on the value to them, but also how
Carlos:I think they'll feel more amenable to try this thing than this thing,
Carlos:than this thing 'cause it tells a story not only in terms of their
Carlos:own growth and development, but also how much they're willing to
Carlos:invest at different points of their.
Carlos:Education or transformation.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Ben:So the thing that was actually coming to my head as you were talking there
Ben:was not directly what you were talking about, but don't say that personally.
Ben:The thought that was actually coming up was if Elon Musk was
Ben:on the Happy Pricing course
Carlos:Yeah.
Ben:Working out while two at Twitter, what would we have gone through, right?
Carlos:Ooh.
Ben:So obviously he would've begun the endeavor, the exercise, thinking
Ben:about his attention, thinking about what he wanted to get out of it, thinking
Ben:about all of those sorts of things.
Ben:So it had some kind of clarity about the kind of direction he was traveling
Ben:and the work that he wanted to do.
Ben:Then the next thing that he would do, uh, on the course with his happy
Ben:cohort of other people having made the relatively small investment compared to
Ben:the 44 billion that he spent on Twitter, um, he basically would've done some
Ben:more work thinking about what it is that the people were actually buying.
Ben:So in his mind he's thinking this blue tick is worth something to people.
Ben:So there is a universe of people who have that blue tick that
Ben:presumably it is worth something.
Ben:And actually, so one of the things we do is actually better
Ben:understand, well, what is it that those people are actually buying?
Ben:What is it?
Ben:What is the change that those people are wanting, are enjoying by kind of
Ben:wanting the blue tick and being willing to spend money on the blue tick.
Ben:And so there will be a whole range of things which are important to people
Ben:who have the blue tick, uh, about why they would want it, why it's important
Ben:for them, which might be about status, which might be about how other people
Ben:perceive them, might be about their own kind of credibility or their own
Ben:respect or their own understanding or their own kind of sort of professional,
Ben:um, sort of integrity or positioning.
Ben:Might be important for the work that they do.
Ben:It might be important for their ability to.
Ben:Grow and connect and, and grow more, more followers.
Ben:There'll be a whole range of reasons that are actually important to people
Ben:for why they want the blue tick.
Ben:And all of those things do varying degrees and reasons,
Ben:of course have a value.
Ben:They have a value to, you know, why is it important for
Ben:Carlos to have a blue tick?
Ben:Because his followers think about him in a certain way, more likely to
Ben:attract other followers as followers.
Ben:People will pay attention more to things that he says or he doesn't say.
Ben:So there is value in that to you.
Ben:And so the, the, the task for Elon while he's on the course and with
Ben:the tools that he gets, probably by joining the Momentum bit afterwards,
Ben:'cause he is not gonna nail all of this just in the one go, he is gonna
Ben:have to work at this for a little bit of time, is he kind better
Ben:understands all of these motivations and clarifications and all of this things.
Ben:And then he basically starts to experiment in a conversational
Ben:sense with a pool of key people.
Ben:'Cause of course he's not gonna do it with all the people who
Ben:have a blue tick or all the people who might want a blue, blue tick.
Ben:He's going to sort of experiment, be in conversation with a relatively
Ben:small group of those people, you know, using questions, using conversations to
Ben:understand what is it that the Carlos is of the world who have a blue tick?
Ben:Why do they want it?
Ben:Why is it important for them?
Ben:What do they gain from doing that?
Ben:And through being in conversation, he will start to better understand
Ben:what the value of the blue tick is to different people at different times.
Ben:And as he better understands what the value of the blue tick is to different
Ben:people at different times, he's able to go into the fourth part of the
Ben:Happy Pricing, uh, course and start to understand with what options might be.
Ben:Because I think that's the other thing, which is kind
Ben:of alluded to in the article.
Ben:It spoke a little bit about framing there.
Ben:There's no kind of frame.
Ben:We're just.
Ben:Vomiting a figure into the world.
Ben:There does need to be some choice.
Ben:You know, the Carloses of the world who have a blue tick, don't want
Ben:to feel like a price is just being forced on their head, which is a
Ben:yes no thing, I'm in or I'm out and this is the, you know, either,
Ben:either I do this or I don't do this.
Ben:There should be some opportunity for Carloses to engage at a different
Ben:level, or there should be an opportunity for Carlos to understand
Ben:the value of a blue tick at this price versus one at this price, might
Ben:point to kind of different benefits or different ways of, of engaging.
Ben:So that sort of suite of things, if.
Ben:Elon would like to join us on the course he's of course very welcome to do that.
Ben:But I think it's about that.
Ben:It's about process.
Ben:It's about, and again, what it's talking about in the article, there
Ben:is about, it is about strategy.
Ben:It is about thinking things through.
Ben:It is about research.
Ben:It is about framing.
Ben:It is about having care for the Carloses of the world, and better understanding
Ben:what it is for them about why.
Ben:And the, you know, why, why would I even want a blue tick?
Ben:What's it gonna do for me?
Ben:And I think if you don't get into that space, you are never gonna be able
Ben:to think about a price that speaks to, you know, speaks to you or speaks
Ben:to somebody who might be willing or able to pay for the blue tick.
Ben:Because undoubtedly there are many people who would pay for it if it
Ben:was spoken to them in the right way.
Ben:Uh, for the right reason with the right care.
Carlos:Yeah.
Carlos:And I think it's interesting that whole, you know, giving that example
Carlos:of, would I pay for a blue tick?
Carlos:At the moment, no, because, uh, a I don't have a massive
Carlos:enough brand to defend.
Carlos:So my assumption now, so if we're gonna say like, someone who wants to pay a
Carlos:blue for a blue tick is potentially someone who's gonna have lots of other
Carlos:accounts who are trying to piggyback on their brand and their status.
Carlos:And so they want to be heard as the authoritative person for
Carlos:themselves, as opposed to be having their followers distracted or
Carlos:people distracted by other people.
Carlos:I.
Carlos:So depending on how important my brand is and how important it is
Carlos:for other aspects of my business, whether I'm a speaker, whether I'm
Carlos:a writer, whether I'm a politician, then that starts to tell me a story
Carlos:of like, ah, yes, actually $20 is cheap compared to losing a 10 grand
Carlos:speaking gig, or suddenly being defamed because I said something contentious
Carlos:online that people mistook me for.
Carlos:So even in that case, if I was someone, uh, on the maybe hundreds
Carlos:of thousands, and this is off the top of my head, if I Barack Obama and I
Carlos:had a hundred million followers, to be honest, I don't need a blue tick.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Because everyone knows this is the place.
Carlos:But if I'm on that cusp where it's hard to differentiate, is that
Carlos:the real person or not, then there might be some value paying even
Carlos:$99 if it's core to my business.
Carlos:And this is the interesting thing here is like who is the core customer?
Carlos:Or of the blue, the, the Twitter's blue tick.
Carlos:Because then that, for me, from what you're saying, starts to dictate
Carlos:Okay, the where the price should be.
Carlos:And I think what's going through my head is like, how much money does Twitter
Carlos:need to make in order to, to whatever?
Carlos:Because if I'm gonna flip it on its head now let's talk about
Carlos:Elon buying Twitter itself.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Why would Elon pay $44 billion for Twitter?
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Now, as I understand it from a quick Google research, they
Carlos:make $5 billion in revenue a year.
Carlos:Now I do, correct me if I'm wrong, you are the investor person.
Carlos:Uh, our rule of thumb, I've heard for tech stocks is like a 10 x.
Carlos:I'm not sure if it's on profit or of revenue as a valuation rule of thumb.
Ben:There's not a quick answer to this point for the reason actually.
Ben:Why A lot of this is kind of interesting because yeah, like an investor would
Ben:say, oh, you know, there is a, there should be a multiple of profits.
Ben:It should be, but of course that doesn't happen at all.
Ben:Like Facebook bought WhatsApp for $19 billion when it was generating
Ben:like not, not 100th of that.
Ben:Why?
Ben:Because the value of it to the buyer is worth that for the
Ben:reasons, which it is for that.
Ben:So all those things around multiples, and the rest of it is just the story
Ben:that we tell ourselves to justify why we've done something, whether
Ben:it's Elon Musk buying Twitter, or you know, somebody buying
Ben:your service, whatever it may be.
Carlos:And so this for me illustrates, well, I was trying to illustrate the
Carlos:values in the eye of the beholder.
Ben:Mm.
Carlos:Without asking Elon, why is it worth $44 billion?
Carlos:Because it might not be for anyone else worth, not even if you did the,
Carlos:you know, the calculations and the revenue, you know how much you're
Carlos:gonna return on investment over 10 years, it probably won't even
Carlos:touch a, like you said, a hundredth of the investment that he's made.
Carlos:But there's a bigger play.
Carlos:You know, what is Elon actually buying?
Carlos:Is the question.
Carlos:And then maybe when you understand the answer of that, then you say, oh yeah,
Carlos:I can see why it's worth $44 billion.
Carlos:As opposed to, why are you paying $44 billion for that thing?
Ben:Yeah.
Ben:To him in that moment is why it worth.
Carlos:To him.
Carlos:Exactly.
Carlos:And so the invitation is to then transpose that situation
Carlos:to your customer when they're buying something off of you.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Carlos:Are they just buying the thing or are they buying something more?
Ben:Yeah.
Carlos:Something that's in their mind.
Carlos:Some, like you say, a good feeling or a solution that's in their
Carlos:heads, not necessarily yours.
Ben:Mm-Hmm.
Ben:Yeah.
Ben:I mean entirely in their heads and never in yours.
Ben:I think, I think where you got to there is a nice, that actually
Ben:the value is in the eye of the beholder, is in the eye of the buyer.
Ben:And so all this sort of stuff is actually that, that's the place
Ben:we need to be is what is the story your customer, your client is
Ben:telling themselves, and how is it that the thing that you have sort
Ben:of supports them in that change, supports them in that journey,
Ben:supports them in that transformation?
Ben:'Cause that's the thing that.
Ben:Somebody is buying.
Ben:And so what we can do, all we can do is try and take the time
Ben:to kind of understand what those stories might be so that we can
Ben:start to understand how our thing, how our product, how our service
Ben:plugs into helping them achieve it.
Carlos:And I like the, you know, use of the word stories
Carlos:and thinking about stories.
Carlos:This is something that we're doing at the moment with Vision 2020.
Carlos:We're, we're kind of focusing a bit more on stories.
Carlos:And there's the stories that your customer's telling themselves and
Carlos:then there's how we relay that or reflect that story so that
Carlos:they feel a sense of empathy.
Carlos:'Cause I think the other aspect of this is there's value in trust.
Carlos:I'm more likely to pay someone who I trust who actually
Carlos:seems to see in my head.
Carlos:And that way, again, it doesn't have to be more stuff in order to charge more.
Carlos:There's something else around relationships, understanding,
Carlos:empathy, and caring.
Carlos:thank you very much for your words and your time and your ears.
Carlos:And until next time, uh, keep on pricing happy.