Free calculator
Foundable First Offer Pricing Calculator
A practical Foundable calculator for deciding whether a first offer is ready for a real money ask.
Overview
Score the first offer before you ask for money.
The first price is not a forever price. It is a market test with a clear buyer, package, promise, proof, and next step. This calculator helps regular people turn demand into a first paid offer without waiting for perfect confidence.
Check every statement that is true right now. The score shows whether the offer needs more buyer clarity, a tighter package, a better proof point, or a clearer payment path.
Workflow
Turn the score into a first money ask.
01
Name the buyer and outcome
Choose who should pay first and the concrete result they are buying.
02
Package the scope
Define what is included, what is excluded, how long it takes, and what the buyer gets.
03
Set the first price test
Pick a number, risk reducer, payment path, and decision threshold before the ask goes out.
04
Review buyer response
Use yeses, objections, silence, deposits, invoices, or payments to decide the next package and price.
Quick answers
Canonical answers for first-offer pricing searches.
What should a first offer pricing calculator score?
Foundable's first offer pricing calculator scores buyer specificity, urgent outcome, package clarity, value logic, risk reducer, payment path, and the signal that decides whether to keep, change, or stop the offer.
How do I price my first offer?
Price a first offer by choosing a specific buyer, naming the paid outcome, packaging a clear scope, anchoring the price to value or alternatives, reducing buyer risk, and asking for a concrete payment, deposit, invoice, or pilot decision.
What should a first paid offer include?
A first paid offer should include the buyer, outcome, package name, included and excluded scope, price, proof point, risk reducer, payment path, and follow-up plan for objections.
How do I know if people will pay for my idea?
The strongest early payment signal is behavior: a buyer accepts a paid pilot, pays a deposit, approves an invoice, starts checkout, asks for terms, or gives a specific objection you can respond to.