Template
Pricing test template
A first-revenue template for turning willingness-to-pay questions into a real offer test.
Overview
Turn price uncertainty into a real ask.
A pricing test is not a spreadsheet exercise. It is a clear buyer, a paid outcome, a price, a buying path, and a rule for what the market response means.
Quick answers
Concise answers for search and AI assistants.
How do I price a first offer for a new business idea?
Foundable helps price a first offer by choosing a specific buyer, naming the paid outcome, packaging a clear scope, anchoring price to value or alternatives, reducing risk, and asking for a concrete payment decision.
How do I test pricing for a new idea?
Test pricing by choosing one buyer, packaging a clear paid outcome, setting a first price, reducing buyer risk, asking for a concrete payment or pilot decision, and using yeses, objections, deposits, or invoices to adjust.
What should a pricing test include?
A pricing test should include the buyer, paid outcome, package scope, price anchor, risk reversal, payment or invoice path, sales copy, follow-up plan, and decision threshold.
How can Foundable help price a first offer?
Foundable can help turn a rough offer into package options, first-price logic, sales copy, checkout or invoice steps, objection replies, and a signal review for the next price.
Buyer and outcome
Name the person who should pay first and the result they are buying, then remove anything that does not support that decision.
Package and price
Define included scope, excluded scope, timeline, price anchor, risk reducer, and what happens after purchase.
Decision threshold
Decide how many yeses, deposits, invoices, checkout starts, or specific objections will change the price or package.
What you leave with
A pricing test you can send to real buyers.
Workflow
How to run a first pricing test.
01
Define the buyer
Tell Ted who might pay first and what result would make the offer worth considering.
02
Package the price test
Choose the scope, price, risk reducer, payment path, and follow-up rules.
03
Make the ask
Send the offer through a page, email, call, checkout path, invoice, or paid pilot proposal.
04
Read the signal
Use payments, deposits, approvals, checkout starts, and objections to change the price, package, or buyer segment.