The Pricing Narrative: Why Your Agency Isn't "Too Expensive," Your Story Just Isn't Finished
In the digital marketing world, we often fall into the trap of treating pricing like a math problem. We calculate overhead, tack on a margin, and present a "package." But as Seth Godin reminds us, pricing isn't just an invoice; it’s a story. For a digital agency, your price tells the client who you are, who they are, and what the future looks like once you’ve solved their problems. If you’re struggling with the "you’re too expensive" objection, the problem likely isn't your hourly rate, it's your narrative.

In the digital marketing world, we often fall into the trap of treating pricing like a math problem. We calculate overhead, tack on a margin, and present a "package." But as Seth Godin reminds us, pricing isn't just an invoice; it’s a story.
For a digital agency, your price tells the client who you are, who they are, and what the future looks like once you’ve solved their problems. If you’re struggling with the "you’re too expensive" objection, the problem likely isn't your hourly rate, it's your narrative.
1. Value is Not a Calculation of Cost
There is a concept in economics called Baumol’s cost disease. It explains why the cost of certain services (like live music or education) rises even if their productivity doesn’t. In marketing, the opposite is often true: technology makes us more productive, but that shouldn't make our services cheaper.
If an expert strategist can solve a brand’s positioning in two hours because they’ve spent twenty years learning how, the value is in the solution, not the 120 minutes of labor. When you price based on the "cost of production," you are essentially telling the client that your time is a commodity. When you price based on value, you are telling them that their transformation is the priority.
The Agency Rule: Price for the hole in the wall you’re fixing, not the hammer you’re using.
2. The Danger of Being the "Next Best Option"
When you have competition—and in digital marketing, everyone has competition—your job isn't to justify your total price. Your job is to justify the gap between you and the cheaper alternative.
If a freelancer offers SEO for $500 and you offer it for $5,000, you aren't selling "SEO." You are selling a story of security, scalability, and strategic integration that the $500 option lacks. If the client can't see that difference, they will default to the cheapest option every time. Everything else being equal, humans want a bargain. Your job is to make sure everything else is never equal.
3. "Too Expensive" is a Feedback Loop
When a prospect says, "That’s too expensive," they are rarely talking about their bank balance. They are telling you that the story you’ve told so far—your case studies, your brand voice, your initial pitch—doesn't have enough "weight" to balance the scale against the price.
Practical Pivot: Instead of lowering your price, try "earning a better story."
-
Don't ask: "What is your budget?" (This is lazy; it’s asking the client to do your job).
-
Do ask: "What are you afraid will happen if this project fails?"
-
Do ask: "What does a 'win' look like for your board of directors six months from now?"
Once you understand their fear and their ambition, your price becomes the insurance policy for the former and the engine for the latter.
4. The Luxury of High Expectations
In the luxury market, price is the feature. High prices attract clients who are looking for the best, and more importantly, they attract clients who are willing to do the work to get results.
If you sell yourself as a "bargain" agency, you attract clients who hunt for discounts. These are the "first-to-leave" clients. The moment a competitor undercuts you by $10, they’re gone. However, when you charge a fair, premium price, you signal that you aren't for everyone. "It might not be for you" is a powerful positioning statement. It says you are specialized, focused, and confident.
5. Winning the Race to the Bottom
The problem with racing to the bottom, trying to be the cheapest agency in the niche, is that you might actually win. And the prize for winning is a business with no margins, burnt-out employees, and clients who don't value your expertise.
Instead, strive for the most resilient slogan a digital agency can earn: "You’ll pay a bit more, but you’ll get more than you paid for."
Summary: Practical Takeaways for Your Next Proposal
-
Stop apologizing for your price. If you have to explain it, explain it once, then move on to the results.
-
Focus on convenience. In the digital space, "doing it for them" and "making it easy" is a massive value add that justifies a premium.
-
Improve the narrative. If the price feels high to the client, your story of their future success is currently too small. Expand the story.
-
Avoid coupons. Discounts create an expectation of future discounts. Instead of lowering the price, add more value to the "story."
Pricing isn't what you charge; it’s what the client believes they are receiving. Make sure the story you’re telling is worth the investment.