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COMMERCIAL STRATEGY

How to Build a Structured Offer Ladder for a Service Business

A flat offer structure captures the client who arrives ready to buy. A tiered offer ladder captures them at entry and moves them toward higher value over time. Here is what a well-designed offer architecture looks like and how to build one.


WRITTEN BY

Glenn Dobson CEO

TOPIC

Commercial Strategy

IN THIS ARTICLE

  • A flat offer forces a binary decision. Most clients choose neither.
  • How to design an entry offer that converts without undervaluing the business.
  • Where most clients should sit.
  • How to design a premium tier that clients actually buy.
  • More from the Knowledge Hub.

─── THE CASE

A flat offer forces a binary decision. Most clients choose neither.

When a service business presents a single offer at a single price, every potential client must make an all-or-nothing decision. They are either ready to commit at the full price and scope, or they are not. Clients who are interested but not yet committed, who want to test the relationship before investing fully, or who simply have a lower initial budget have no option. They leave.

A tiered offer structure changes this. It creates entry points that allow a client to begin a relationship at the level they are ready for, with a clear path toward higher value as that relationship develops. The commercial result is more clients engaging, more revenue per client over time, and a business with a structured rather than arbitrary client journey.

DIRECT ANSWER

A well-designed offer ladder has three to four tiers. The entry tier converts hesitant or budget-constrained prospects at a lower price point and defined scope. The core tier is where most clients sit and where the business delivers its primary value proposition. The premium tier captures the clients with the highest investment readiness and generates the best margin per relationship. Each tier should have a clear upgrade rationale rather than simply being a more expensive version of the one below.

─── ENTRY TIER

How to design an entry offer that converts without undervaluing the business.

The entry tier serves two purposes: it lowers the barrier to initial engagement, and it provides a genuine experience of value that creates the appetite for more. An entry tier that is simply a taster with no real substance converts clients who were going to buy anyway and creates no progression appetite. An entry tier that delivers real value efficiently converts hesitant clients and positions the upgrade conversation naturally.

The entry tier should be priced to cover its costs with adequate margin, not priced as a loss leader. A loss leader entry tier trains clients to expect the relationship to be cheap and makes subsequent price increases harder to sustain.

“A flat offer structure is a commercial convenience for the business. An offer ladder is a commercial strategy for the client.“

GLENN DOBSON CEO SHRINE LONDON

─── CORE TIER

Where most clients should sit.

The core tier is the commercial centre of the offer architecture. It should contain the business’s primary value proposition delivered at a price point that generates adequate margin and represents genuine value for the client. Most clients should be here. The business should be optimised to deliver at this tier efficiently.

A core tier that is underpriced produces a business full of clients at the wrong margin level. A core tier that is overpriced produces a business with an entry tier full of clients who never upgrade. Pricing the core tier correctly requires honest assessment of both what it costs to deliver and what the client would pay for the outcome it produces.

─── PREMIUM TIER

How to design a premium tier that clients actually buy.

The premium tier is where the relationship is closest, the access is greatest and the margin is highest. It should not be a core tier with more hours added. It should offer something genuinely different: a level of access, a type of involvement, or a quality of relationship that the client at the core tier cannot receive regardless of how long they stay there.

The premium tier conversation is fundamentally different from an upgrade conversation at other levels. It is not about more of what the client already has. It is about access to something that requires a higher level of investment and produces a correspondingly different quality of outcome. If the premium tier cannot be described in those terms, it has not been properly designed.

─── REAL ENGAGEMENT

Wellness & Recovery Brand

A strong product with a flat commercial model. A four-tier offer ladder was designed with clear pricing, progression logic and a healthcare niche position, giving the business the commercial architecture to capture clients at entry level and move them toward higher value over time.

READ THE FULL CASE STUDY ⟶

If this is relevant to where your business is right now, the conversation starts with a call.

BOOK A CONFIDENTIAL CALL
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More from the Knowledge Hub.

─── COMMERCIAL STRATEGY

How to Build a Recurring Revenue Model for a Service Business

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READ THE ARTICLE ⟶

─── COMMERCIAL STRATEGY

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READ THE ARTICLE ⟶

─── COMMERCIAL STRATEGY

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READ THE ARTICLE ⟶

SHRINE LONDON

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London, EC1V 2NX
United Kingdom

hello@shrinelondon.com

+44 (0) 208 064 6072

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