When revenue stalls, the first instinct is usually the same.
Get more customers.
More ads, more outreach, more pipeline. And sure, that works… up to a point. But it’s also expensive, and honestly, it gets harder over time.
The thing is, a lot of SaaS companies are sitting on untapped revenue already. Not hidden, exactly. Just under-optimized.
And it comes down to pricing.
Why Pricing Gets Set Once and Then Ignored
Early on, pricing is usually a quick decision.
You pick something that feels reasonable, maybe copy competitors, maybe guess a bit. Then you move on. There are bigger problems to solve.
That makes sense in the beginning.
But later? That same pricing sticks around longer than it should. Even as the product improves, even as customers get more value, the pricing doesn’t always keep up.
And that gap quietly grows.
Value Changes Faster Than Pricing
Here’s something that happens more often than people admit.
The product gets better over time. More features, better performance, stronger outcomes for customers. But the pricing stays tied to the original version.
So customers are getting more value… without paying more.
Sounds nice for them. Not so great for revenue.
In some cases, teams hesitate to adjust pricing because they’re worried about pushback. Or churn. Or just the complexity of changing things.
But avoiding it doesn’t solve anything. It just delays the conversation.
Usage-Based Pricing Starts to Make More Sense
Flat pricing is simple.
But it doesn’t always match how people actually use the product.
Some customers barely use it. Others rely on it heavily. Charging them the same amount? That creates imbalance.
That’s why more companies are shifting toward usage-based models. You pay based on what you use. Seems fair, right?
It also aligns revenue with value more closely. As customers grow and use the product more, revenue grows with them.
Of course, this adds complexity. Metering usage, tracking limits, handling edge cases.
That’s where teams start looking into tools, sometimes even exploring Metronome alternatives to handle billing logic more flexibly.
Because once you move beyond flat pricing, the infrastructure matters.
Packaging Matters More Than You Think
It’s not just about how much you charge. It’s how you structure it.
What’s included in each plan? What’s gated? What’s unlimited?
These decisions shape behavior.
For example, if a key feature sits behind a higher-tier plan, some users will upgrade just to unlock it. Others might stay on a lower tier but use the product less.
Both outcomes affect revenue.
The tricky part is finding the right balance. Too restrictive, and people feel blocked. Too generous, and you leave money on the table.
There’s no perfect answer. Just iteration.
Expansion Revenue Is Often Overlooked
A lot of SaaS growth comes from existing customers.
Not new ones.
But expansion doesn’t happen automatically. It needs a path.
That could be add-ons, higher tiers, usage increases, or even new modules. The important part is giving customers a clear way to grow within your product.
If the only option is “stay or leave,” you’re missing something.
And honestly, that’s more common than it should be.
Discounts Can Quietly Hurt More Than Help
This one’s a bit uncomfortable.
Discounts feel like an easy win. Close the deal, keep things moving, hit the target.
But over time, they create inconsistencies.
Different customers paying different prices for the same thing. Renewals becoming awkward. Sales teams relying on discounts instead of value.
It adds up.
And once discounting becomes the norm, it’s hard to pull back.
That doesn’t mean discounts should never happen. Just that they should be intentional, not automatic.
Pricing Is a Product, Too
This is where the mindset shifts.
Pricing isn’t just a number on a page. It’s part of the product experience.
It affects how people perceive value. How they decide to upgrade. How they talk about your product internally.
So it needs attention. Testing. Adjustment.
Not constantly, but regularly.
Because markets change. Competitors change. Your product definitely changes.
And pricing should keep up.
Where Teams Usually Get Stuck
Most teams know their pricing isn’t perfect.
They’ve heard feedback. They’ve seen odd patterns. Maybe even noticed customers using the product in ways pricing doesn’t reflect.
But changing it feels risky.
What if we lose customers? What if it backfires?
Those are real concerns.
But staying the same carries its own risk. Slower growth, missed opportunities, revenue that doesn’t match the value you’re delivering.
It’s just less visible.
The Quiet Wins That Add Up
Small pricing adjustments can have a big impact.
A slightly better tier structure. Clearer upgrade paths. Pricing that reflects actual usage. Even just removing confusion from the page.
Individually, these changes seem minor.
Together, they shift how customers engage.
And over time, revenue starts to grow. Not from more customers, but from better alignment between what you offer and what people are willing to pay.
Which, honestly, is the whole point.

