The gap between what you charge and what customers would actually pay is where your pricing upside lives.
Willingness to pay is the maximum price a customer would accept for a product or service before deciding not to purchase. It is not what customers say they would pay in a survey. It is what they actually pay when faced with a real purchasing decision. The distinction matters because stated willingness to pay is consistently lower than revealed willingness to pay.
For service businesses, the gap between the current price and the true WTP of the customer base is the single most important number in pricing strategy. If you charge $29/month and your average customer would pay up to $37/month before seriously considering cancellation, that $8 gap multiplied across your member base is pure margin improvement waiting to be captured.
The challenge is that nobody will tell you their real WTP. Customers strategically understate what they would pay. Surveys are unreliable. Focus groups produce answers designed to please the moderator. The only reliable way to measure WTP is through behavioral data: observing what actually happens when prices change.
Membership example. A car wash operator with 5 locations charges $34/month for the unlimited plan. Location 3, which opened later, charges $39/month for the same plan. Location 3 has the same conversion rate and lower churn. The behavioral data reveals that WTP is at least $39, and the other 4 locations are leaving $5/member/month on the table.
Non membership example. A med spa raises Botox pricing from $12/unit to $14/unit. Volume drops 2%. Revenue increases 14%. The revealed WTP was significantly higher than the old price, and the operator had been under pricing for years because they assumed patients were more price sensitive than they actually were.
Competitor anchoring. Operators benchmark against competitor prices and set their rates at or slightly below market. This assumes competitors have optimized their pricing, which they almost certainly have not. In most markets, everyone is under priced because everyone is anchoring to the same under priced competitors.
Fear of churn. Operators overestimate the number of customers who will leave after a price increase because they focus on the vocal minority who complain rather than the silent majority who absorb the change.
Cost plus thinking. Operators set prices based on what they need to charge to hit a margin target rather than what the market will bear. This leaves the entire gap between the cost based price and the value based price uncaptured.
Price elasticity tells you how demand responds to price changes. Willingness to pay tells you where the ceiling is. Elasticity is about the slope of the demand curve. WTP is about where the curve hits zero. A pricing diagnostic needs both: elasticity to understand how customers react at each price point, and WTP to understand how high you can go before the reaction becomes material.
Every pricing diagnostic estimates WTP through behavioral data analysis rather than customer surveys. The output is a range of price points with projected volume and churn impacts at each level, so the operator can make an informed decision about how much of the WTP gap to capture and how quickly to move. The analysis draws on historical rate changes, location level variation, competitive positioning, and cohort behavior to build a picture of where real pricing power exists.
Price Elasticity measures how demand responds to price changes. It is the sensitivity measure that complements WTP.
Anchoring directly influences WTP. A higher anchor increases the range of prices customers consider acceptable.
Weber Fechner Law defines the threshold of noticeable price changes. It guides how to capture WTP incrementally without triggering churn.
This principle is applied in every TMN pricing diagnostic. Finding the gap between what you charge and what customers will pay is the fastest path to revenue uplift. See the full framework.
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