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Archived noindex page. Kefiw's public focus is Property decision help.

Archived page

This older Kefiw page is kept for reference, marked noindex, and removed from the primary sitemap. The current Kefiw experience is focused on property decisions: cost, quotes, damage, buying, selling, owning, and packets.

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Business · Pricing

Price Increase Planner

Raise prices with math, not apology.

Raise prices with math, not apology.

Plan a price increase based on margin pressure, cost increases, client value, timing, and retention risk.

Best for: Freelancers and small businesses deciding how much to raise prices and how much churn the increase can survive.

Estimate inputs

Decision mode

Get the current planning number from the inputs.

What most advice leaves out

Most price-increase advice focuses on the email. The harder part is deciding who gets the increase, how much churn is tolerable, and whether the business has earned the new price with value or cost reality.

How this calculator thinks

This calculator compares current and proposed price, margin pressure, cost increases, client count, churn risk, demand confidence, support burden, and renewal timing.

Reality check questions

  • Which clients are low-margin?
  • What value changed since the old price?
  • How much churn can the increase survive?
  • Is renewal timing appropriate?
  • Should the increase be segmented?

What this tool does not do

  • It does not guarantee a business outcome.
  • It does not replace tax, legal, payroll, accounting, compliance, or advisor review when those issues are material.
  • It does not know your contracts, state rules, vendor terms, or books.
  • It does help you find the assumption that needs the next check.

Your next calculator depends on what felt uncomfortable

Tools that may help after you run the numbers

invoicing software

Use this category only if it reduces unpaid time, clarifies profit, protects scope, or improves collection.

proposal tools

Use this category only if it reduces unpaid time, clarifies profit, protects scope, or improves collection.

CRM software

Use this category only if it reduces unpaid time, clarifies profit, protects scope, or improves collection.

pricing templates

Use this category only if it reduces unpaid time, clarifies profit, protects scope, or improves collection.

Messy questions this calculator should answer

How much should I raise my prices?

Start with margin pressure, cost increases, client profitability, demand confidence, and how much churn the increase can survive.

How do I tell clients?

Keep it simple: state the new price, effective date, scope, and transition period without overexplaining.

What if clients push back?

Offer scope reduction or phased timing before reversing the price increase.

Business recommendation rule

Calculator result -> guide -> template -> software or service

Kefiw should not send a Business user from a calculator straight to generic affiliate cards. The result should point to the next decision, then to the asset or tool category that fits the actual bottleneck.

  1. Step 1

    Calculator result

    Start with the calculator state, not a tool category.

  2. Step 2

    Result-state guide

    Read the guide for the exact weakness the result exposed.

  3. Step 3

    Template or packet

    Turn the number into a script, worksheet, checklist, or review packet.

  4. Step 4

    Software or service bridge

    Consider tools only after the problem is clear enough to justify them.

Disclosure stays close to recommendation blocks: Kefiw may earn a commission from some links, but calculator results are not changed by affiliate relationships.

Assumptions

  • Churn break-even uses current client revenue and does not predict actual client behavior.
  • Segmented or phased increases may be better when churn risk is high.

Pricing is not just arithmetic

Rate and margin decisions fail when the calculator ignores non-billable time, owner energy, revision creep, discounts, sales time, taxes, and slow months. The lowest sustainable price should still leave enough room to do the work well.

  • If the rate feels high but take-home is low, the missing inputs are usually taxes, idle time, admin, sales, and unpaid scope creep.
  • Discounts should be tested against margin, not revenue.
  • Break-even is a warning light, not the goal.

This is decision math, not a generic calculator

The useful output is not one perfect number. It is the spread between conservative, expected, and aggressive assumptions, plus the point where the decision stops being worth the drag.

  • Use realistic inputs for time, adoption, churn, admin, and slow months.
  • A good result can still say "not worth it yet." That is a feature, not a failure.
  • Run the calculator once with optimistic assumptions and once with the ugly-but-plausible case.

When the decision usually goes wrong

Operators usually get hurt by hidden costs: non-billable time, ramp time, management burden, unused seats, tax reserve, scope creep, collection delay, and software maintenance. Those costs are easy to ignore because they do not always arrive as one invoice.

Static decision worksheet: what to ask next

Use the result as a question list, not as an AI verdict. The next move should be driven by the risky assumptions the calculator exposed.

  • Tax pages: ask which income, withholding, safe-harbor, state, payroll, and documentation assumptions need professional review.
  • Hiring pages: ask whether the work is capacity, process cleanup, role design, classification risk, or payroll cash-flow pressure.
  • Pricing pages: ask whether billable hours, revision creep, sales time, discounts, or slow months are the real reason the number feels uncomfortable.
  • SaaS and cloud pages: ask which seats, renewals, duplicate tools, contract terms, adoption rates, review time, and exit costs are driving the result.

Related tools and tracks

Tools that may help after you run the numbers

Use this only after the calculator shows where the pressure is. The useful category depends on the bottleneck, not the ad pitch.

  • invoicing software
  • proposal tools
  • CRM software
  • pricing templates

Source links used for this calculator family