Penetration Pricing for SaaS: When Going Low Builds Real Value

Penetration Pricing for SaaS: When Going Low Builds Real Value - hero image

Most founders reach for pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing for exact­ly the wrong rea­son: they are afraid to charge full price, and a low launch num­ber lets them avoid the con­ver­sa­tion. That fear dressed up as strat­e­gy has capped more SaaS com­pa­nies at $5M annu­al recur­ring rev­enue (ARR) than any com­peti­tor ever has. Done delib­er­ate­ly, pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a real weapon — a way to buy mar­ket share in a knife-fight cat­e­go­ry where nobody will try you until the price is low enough to make try­ing you free of risk. Done by default, it is a deci­sion to run a low­er-mar­gin, low­er-mul­ti­ple busi­ness for the rest of its life, because the one thing pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is gen­uine­ly bad at is going back up.

Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is the delib­er­ate choice to launch below the mar­ket price to win cus­tomers and mar­ket share quick­ly, then raise the price once you have the base and the switch­ing cost to make the increase stick. The word that mat­ters in that sen­tence is delib­er­ate. A price that is low because you nev­er test­ed will­ing­ness to pay is not pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing — it is an acci­dent. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a plan with an entry price, a set of pre­con­di­tions that have to be true for the plan to work, a time­line, and — the part almost every­one skips — an exit. If you can­not state the price you are climb­ing to and the date you start climb­ing, you are not run­ning the play. You are just cheap.

This guide cov­ers what pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing actu­al­ly is, the four mar­ket con­di­tions that have to hold before it can work, how it dif­fers from price skim­ming and from sim­ply being the low-cost option, a ful­ly worked exam­ple on a SaaS com­pa­ny climb­ing from $6M toward $12M ARR, the five ways it qui­et­ly destroys enter­prise val­ue, the exit plan that sep­a­rates the win­ners from the casu­al­ties, and a deci­sion check­list you can run against your own busi­ness this week. The read­er who gets the most from the next fif­teen min­utes is a SaaS chief exec­u­tive offi­cer (CEO) between $3M and $20M ARR who is either about to launch a new prod­uct into a crowd­ed cat­e­go­ry, or sus­pects the “intro­duc­to­ry” price they set three years ago has qui­et­ly become a per­ma­nent ceil­ing.

What Penetration Pricing Actually Is

Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is an acqui­si­tion strat­e­gy. You set your price mean­ing­ful­ly below what the mar­ket expects to pay — not 10% below, but 40%, 60%, some­times free at the entry tier — so that price stops being a rea­son for a prospect to say no. You accept thin, zero, or neg­a­tive mar­gin on those ear­ly cus­tomers in exchange for vol­ume, and the whole bet rests on two things hap­pen­ing after you have the vol­ume: your cost to serve each cus­tomer falls as you scale, and your abil­i­ty to raise price ris­es as cus­tomers get locked in.

Two words car­ry the def­i­n­i­tion, and both are usu­al­ly miss­ing when a founder tells me they are “doing pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing.”

Delib­er­ate. The price is cho­sen, not default­ed into. You know the mar­ket price, you know your cost to serve, you know the price you intend to reach, and you are choos­ing to sit below the mar­ket for a defined peri­od to buy some­thing spe­cif­ic — share, a ref­er­ence cus­tomer base, a beach­head in a seg­ment. A founder who priced low because they were ner­vous and nev­er revis­it­ed it is not exe­cut­ing a strat­e­gy. They have a habit that hap­pens to look like one.

Tem­po­rary. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing has an end date or an end con­di­tion. It is a ramp, not a rest­ing place. The low price exists to get you to a posi­tion — a mar­ket share num­ber, a switch­ing-cost thresh­old, a scale mile­stone — after which it goes away. The moment the low price becomes the iden­ti­ty of the com­pa­ny rather than a phase in its life, pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing has failed, regard­less of how many logos it won.

Under­neath both words sits the same engine every SaaS pric­ing deci­sion runs on: unit eco­nom­ics. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing delib­er­ate­ly runs the LTV/CAC ratio and the CAC pay­back peri­od into unhealthy ter­ri­to­ry on pur­pose, on the bet that both recov­er — LTV climbs as you raise price on a locked-in base, and CAC falls as your brand does more of the sell­ing. If you can­not draw the line from “low price today” to “healthy unit eco­nom­ics lat­er,” you do not have a pen­e­tra­tion strat­e­gy. You have a sub­sidy with no expi­ra­tion date.

An impor­tant dis­tinc­tion before we go fur­ther. There is a legal line between aggres­sive low pric­ing and preda­to­ry pric­ing — pric­ing below cost specif­i­cal­ly to dri­ve com­peti­tors out of the mar­ket and then raise prices once you hold a monop­oly. Preda­to­ry pric­ing (the extreme end of the spec­trum, defined here by the Cor­po­rate Finance Insti­tute) can attract antitrust scruti­ny for com­pa­nies with real mar­ket pow­er. For a $5M–$15M ARR SaaS com­pa­ny fight­ing for share against incum­bents ten times its size, this is almost nev­er a prac­ti­cal con­cern — you do not have the mar­ket pow­er to be preda­to­ry — but you should know the term exists and where the line sits.

The Four Conditions That Have to Be True

Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is not a strat­e­gy you choose because you like it. It is a strat­e­gy the mar­ket con­di­tions choose for you. When the four con­di­tions below hold, it can be the fastest route to share. When they do not, a low price just trains the mar­ket to see you as cheap and hands you a cus­tomer base that leaves the moment the num­ber goes up.

ConditionWhy it mattersHow to check it in your business
Low differentiationIf buyers cannot tell you apart from incumbents without trying you, price is the only lever that gets them in the doorIn win/loss calls, do prospects struggle to articulate why they picked a competitor over you beyond "we already had them"?
Price-elastic demandThe strategy only works if a lower price produces meaningfully more sign-ups; if demand does not move with price, you gave away margin for nothingHave you ever seen sign-ups jump on a discount or promo? If a 20% price cut barely moves volume, demand is inelastic
Economies of scaleYour cost to serve each customer must fall as you add customers, or the thin early margin never recoversModel your cost per customer at 200 vs 2,000 customers. If it barely moves, penetration pricing has no payoff engine
Rising switching costYou must be able to raise price later without mass churn, which requires customers to be locked in by the time you climbOnce a customer is fully onboarded, how painful is it to rip you out? If switching is trivial, your future price increase has no floor

The four are not a menu — you need all four, or at min­i­mum the last two. Miss economies of scale, and you are run­ning a per­ma­nent­ly low-mar­gin busi­ness with no mech­a­nism to ever earn a real mar­gin; the thin ear­ly pric­ing was sup­posed to be an invest­ment that pays back at scale, and if cost per cus­tomer does not fall at scale, there is no pay­back. Miss ris­ing switch­ing cost, and you have built an acqui­si­tion machine with a trap door: you win cus­tomers on price, and you lose them on price the instant you try to raise it, because noth­ing holds them.

A use­ful pre­con­di­tion to lay­er on top of the four: pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is gen­uine­ly bad at high-dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion, low-elas­tic­i­ty cat­e­gories. If your prod­uct is mean­ing­ful­ly bet­ter and buy­ers can feel the dif­fer­ence, a low price active­ly hurts you — it under­cuts the per­ceived val­ue of the thing that is actu­al­ly win­ning deals, and it attracts exact­ly the price-shop­ping cus­tomers who will nev­er val­ue what makes you dif­fer­ent. The cat­e­go­ry where pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing wins is the crowd­ed, com­modi­tized, “why would I switch” cat­e­go­ry — the one where economies of scale are real and your only prob­lem is get­ting any­one to try you at all.

Penetration Pricing vs. Price Skimming vs. Being Cheap

Three things get con­fused con­stant­ly, and the con­fu­sion is expen­sive because the three imply com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent busi­ness­es. Here is the clean sep­a­ra­tion.

StrategyStarting priceDirection over timeBest fitCore risk
Penetration pricingBelow marketRises as base and switching cost growCrowded, commoditized categories where nobody will try you firstYou can never raise price; the low number becomes permanent
Price skimmingAbove marketFalls as early adopters are exhaustedGenuinely novel or premium products with little direct competitionYou train the market to wait for the price to drop
Competitor-based (being cheap)Slightly below rivalsTracks whatever competitors doA category with a clear price ceiling and no unique valueYou anchor to competitors' mistakes and give up pricing power

The dif­fer­ence between pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing and sim­ply being cheap is intent and end­point. Being cheap is a per­ma­nent posi­tion — you have decid­ed your val­ue propo­si­tion is “we cost less,” and you will track com­peti­tors down for­ev­er. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a tem­po­rary posi­tion with a planned climb — you are cheap now, on pur­pose, to buy some­thing, and you have a dat­ed plan to stop being cheap. Being cheap has no exit. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is noth­ing but an exit that you are walk­ing toward from a low start­ing point.

Price skim­ming is the mir­ror image, and it is worth under­stand­ing because the two suit oppo­site sit­u­a­tions. Price skim­ming launch­es high to cap­ture the cus­tomers with the high­est will­ing­ness to pay, then low­ers price over time to reach the rest of the mar­ket. It works when your prod­uct is nov­el enough that ear­ly adopters will pay a pre­mi­um and there is no direct com­peti­tor to under­cut you. If you are enter­ing a cat­e­go­ry full of estab­lished incum­bents, skim­ming is usu­al­ly the wrong tool — there is no pre­mi­um to skim, because the buy­er already has three cheap­er alter­na­tives on their desk. The two strate­gies are not com­peti­tors; they are answers to oppo­site mar­ket con­di­tions. (For the full menu of options and where each fits, see the SaaS pric­ing strat­e­gy play­book and the com­pan­ion break­down of SaaS pric­ing mod­els.)

A Worked Example: The $6M ARR Challenger

Abstrac­tions do not change behav­ior. Math does. Walk through a real­is­tic case.

Merid­i­an is a B2B SaaS com­pa­ny at $6M ARR sell­ing project-man­age­ment soft­ware into a cat­e­go­ry owned by three incum­bents. The mar­ket price for a com­pa­ra­ble tool is rough­ly $50 per seat per month. Merid­i­an’s prod­uct is gen­uine­ly good, but in a crowd­ed cat­e­go­ry, “gen­uine­ly good” does not get returned sales calls — prospects already have a tool, and switch­ing feels like more work than it is worth. Merid­i­an decides to run a delib­er­ate pen­e­tra­tion play: launch a paid tier at $25 per seat per month, half the mar­ket price, for new cus­tomers only, with a stat­ed plan to climb to mar­ket rate over 24 months as the base builds.

First, con­firm the pay­off engine is real. Merid­i­an’s ful­ly-loaded cost to serve a seat — host­ing, sup­port, the slice of the prod­uct and infra­struc­ture team attrib­ut­able to serv­ing cus­tomers — is $9 per seat per month at today’s scale of rough­ly 10,000 seats. Their mod­el shows that at 30,000 seats, cost to serve falls to $6 per seat per month, because the fixed infra­struc­ture and sup­port-tool­ing costs spread across three times the base. That declin­ing cost curve is the whole license to run this strat­e­gy. With­out it, the math below nev­er recov­ers.

Here is the gross-mar­gin pic­ture at the pen­e­tra­tion price ver­sus the mar­ket price, at both scales.

ScenarioPrice/seat/moCost to serve/seat/moGross profit/seat/moGross margin
Penetration price, today's scale$25$9$1664.0%
Penetration price, at 30,000 seats$25$6$1976.0%
Market price, at 30,000 seats$50$6$4488.0%

Notice what the pen­e­tra­tion price does and does not do. Even at the low $25 price, Merid­i­an is not los­ing mon­ey per seat — they are run­ning a 64% gross mar­gin, thin for SaaS but pos­i­tive, and it climbs to 76% as scale dri­ves cost to serve down. This is the well-run ver­sion: pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing that is aggres­sive on price but nev­er actu­al­ly under­wa­ter. The gap between the 76% pen­e­tra­tion-scale mar­gin and the 88% mar­ket-price mar­gin — twelve points of gross mar­gin — is the prize Merid­i­an is play­ing for when it climbs the price lat­er.

Now the vol­ume bet. At the $50 mar­ket price, Merid­i­an’s win rate against the incum­bents in com­pet­i­tive deals is about 8% — prospects rarely switch for a same-priced alter­na­tive. Their pric­ing test shows that at $25, the win rate rough­ly triples to 24%, because the low price removes the “why both­er switch­ing” objec­tion. On a pipeline of 500 com­pet­i­tive deals per year at an aver­age of 40 seats per deal, the dif­fer­ence is stark.

Market price ($50)Penetration price ($25)
Competitive deals/year500500
Win rate8%24%
Deals won40120
Seats added/year (40 seats/deal)1,6004,800
New ARR added/year$960,000$1,440,000

The pen­e­tra­tion price wins three times as many deals and, even at half the per-seat price, adds 50% more new ARR — $1,440,000 ver­sus $960,000 — because tripling the win rate more than off­sets halv­ing the price. It also stacks up seats three times faster (4,800 ver­sus 1,600 per year), which is what dri­ves Merid­i­an toward the 30,000-seat scale where cost to serve drops. That is the engine work­ing exact­ly as designed: buy share now at a thin-but-pos­i­tive mar­gin, ride the vol­ume down the cost curve, then climb the price on a base that is increas­ing­ly locked in.

The num­ber this whole strat­e­gy lives or dies on is not in either table: it is net rev­enue reten­tion. If Merid­i­an’s pen­e­tra­tion-acquired cus­tomers churn out the moment the price climbs toward $50, every dol­lar of that ear­ly share evap­o­rates and the strat­e­gy is a bon­fire. If they stay — because by month 24 the tool is embed­ded in their work­flow and switch­ing is gen­uine­ly painful — then Merid­i­an rais­es price on a retained base and cap­tures the twelve points of mar­gin it was play­ing for all along. The pric­ing deci­sion was nev­er real­ly about the $25. It was about whether Merid­i­an could build enough switch­ing cost dur­ing the low-price win­dow to make the climb sur­viv­able.

The Five Ways Penetration Pricing Destroys Value

Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing fails in pre­dictable ways. Every one of these is avoid­able, and every one of them has killed a com­pa­ny’s mar­gin struc­ture while the founder was con­grat­u­lat­ing them­selves on the logo count.

  1. The price becomes per­ma­nent. This is the big one. You launch low, you win share, and then you dis­cov­er that rais­ing price to mar­ket rate trig­gers a wave of can­cel­la­tions you can­not stom­ach, so you nev­er do it. The “intro­duc­to­ry” price is now the price, for­ev­er. The entire strat­e­gy was premised on climb­ing, and you nev­er climbed — which means you did not run pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing at all, you just per­ma­nent­ly under­priced. Pre­vent it by writ­ing the climb into the plan before you launch, and by rais­ing price on new cus­tomers ear­ly and often so climb­ing becomes a nor­mal motion rather than a ter­ri­fy­ing one-time event.
  2. You attract the wrong cus­tomers. A low price does not attract “cus­tomers.” It attracts price-sen­si­tive cus­tomers — the exact seg­ment least like­ly to stay when the price ris­es and least like­ly to expand. You end up with a base that looks great on a logo-count slide and ter­ri­ble on a reten­tion cohort chart. Pre­vent it by watch­ing cohort reten­tion from day one and by mak­ing sure your low price is win­ning you cus­tomers who fit your ide­al cus­tomer pro­file, not just cus­tomers who fit your dis­count.
  3. You sig­nal low qual­i­ty. Price is infor­ma­tion. A price 60% below the mar­ket does not just say “afford­able” — to a mean­ing­ful slice of buy­ers it says “what’s wrong with it?” In cat­e­gories where buy­ers can­not eas­i­ly assess qual­i­ty before pur­chase, an aggres­sive­ly low price can sup­press demand from the exact seri­ous buy­ers you most want. Pre­vent it by fram­ing the low price as an explic­it, time-boxed intro­duc­to­ry offer — “launch pric­ing,” “found­ing-cus­tomer rate” — so the num­ber reads as a delib­er­ate pro­mo­tion rather than a per­ma­nent state­ment about your worth.
  4. You start a price war. If your incum­bents have deep pock­ets and decide to match you, you have trad­ed a dif­fer­en­ti­at­ed posi­tion for a race to the bot­tom that the largest bal­ance sheet wins — and that is vir­tu­al­ly nev­er the new entrant who start­ed it. Pre­vent it by choos­ing pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing in cat­e­gories where incum­bents are struc­tural­ly unwill­ing to cut price (because doing so would can­ni­bal­ize a large exist­ing base), not cat­e­gories where a well-fund­ed com­peti­tor can casu­al­ly out-dis­count you until you run out of cash.
  5. You run out of run­way before the climb. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a bet that con­sumes cash up front and pays back lat­er. If “lat­er” arrives after your bank account hits zero, the qual­i­ty of the strat­e­gy is irrel­e­vant — you are insol­vent. Pre­vent it by mod­el­ing the cash cost of the thin-mar­gin peri­od against your actu­al run­way before you launch, and by treat­ing pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing as unavail­able if you can­not fund the trough with real con­fi­dence.

The thread con­nect­ing all five: pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a financ­ing deci­sion as much as a pric­ing deci­sion. You are spend­ing mar­gin now to buy an asset — a locked-in, expand­able cus­tomer base — that pays off lat­er. Like any financed invest­ment, it kills you if the pay­off nev­er mate­ri­al­izes or arrives after you are out of mon­ey.

The Exit: The Part Almost Everyone Skips

The exit is the entire strat­e­gy. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing with­out a climb is just a per­ma­nent dis­count with extra steps. Here is how the dis­ci­plined ver­sion rais­es price with­out torch­ing the base it spent so much to acquire.

Grand­fa­ther the ear­ly base; climb on new cus­tomers first. The clean­est exit rais­es price for new cus­tomers while let­ting exist­ing pen­e­tra­tion-era cus­tomers keep their rate, either indef­i­nite­ly or for a defined win­dow like twelve months. This lets you cap­ture high­er-val­ue new deals imme­di­ate­ly with­out trig­ger­ing a churn event across your entire base at once. Your real­ized aver­age price per cus­tomer climbs steadi­ly as new full-price cus­tomers dilute the low-price cohort, and no sin­gle cus­tomer ever feels ambushed.

Tie the climb to mile­stones, not the cal­en­dar alone. The trig­ger to start rais­ing price is a com­bi­na­tion of mar­ket-share and reten­tion sig­nals: you have hit the share num­ber you were buy­ing, and your cohort reten­tion on pen­e­tra­tion cus­tomers is hold­ing at a lev­el that says they are locked in. If reten­tion is hold­ing, climb. If reten­tion is already leak­ing at the low price, rais­ing price will only accel­er­ate the bleed — that is a sig­nal you acquired the wrong cus­tomers, and the fix is upstream in tar­get­ing, not in the price.

Build the switch­ing cost dur­ing the win­dow, on pur­pose. The low-price peri­od is not just for acquir­ing logos — it is for mak­ing those logos hard to remove. Every inte­gra­tion a cus­tomer con­nects, every work­flow they build on you, every team­mate they onboard, every report they now depend on rais­es the cost of leav­ing. The com­pa­nies that sur­vive the climb are the ones that spent the low-price win­dow aggres­sive­ly deep­en­ing prod­uct adop­tion, so that by the time the price ris­es, rip­ping the prod­uct out costs the cus­tomer more than the price increase does. This is the mech­a­nism behind the strongest rev­enue reten­tion in SaaS: becom­ing the sys­tem of record the cus­tomer’s oper­a­tions depend on.

Climb in steps the mar­ket can absorb. A jump from $25 to $50 in one move invites a mass recon­sid­er­a­tion. A climb from $25 to $32 to $40 to $50 over sev­er­al renew­al cycles lets each increase land as a nor­mal annu­al adjust­ment. Each step should be small enough that “renew at the new price” is obvi­ous­ly less painful than “eval­u­ate, select, migrate to a com­peti­tor.” You are always pric­ing the increase against the cus­tomer’s switch­ing cost, and keep­ing it com­fort­ably below that line.

The dis­ci­pline of the exit is what con­verts pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing from a val­ue-destroy­ing reflex into a val­ue-cre­at­ing strat­e­gy. The gross mar­gin you recov­er and the ARR you build on a retained, climb­ing-price base is what ulti­mate­ly shows up in rev­enue mul­ti­ples when you sell the com­pa­ny. A base acquired cheap and suc­cess­ful­ly climbed to full price is a pre­mi­um asset. A base acquired cheap and stuck there for­ev­er is a low-mar­gin lia­bil­i­ty wear­ing a growth cos­tume.

When to Use Penetration Pricing — and When to Run

Pull the strat­e­gy off the shelf only when the sit­u­a­tion gen­uine­ly fits. Here is the hon­est split.

Use pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing when: you are enter­ing a crowd­ed, com­modi­tized cat­e­go­ry where prospects will not try you with­out a finan­cial rea­son; demand in that cat­e­go­ry is vis­i­bly price-elas­tic; your cost to serve falls mean­ing­ful­ly as you scale; you can build real switch­ing cost dur­ing the low-price win­dow; and you have the run­way to fund the thin-mar­gin trough with con­fi­dence. When all of that is true, pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing can com­press years of share-build­ing into quar­ters — that is the ver­sion that wins.

Do not use pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing when: your prod­uct is gen­uine­ly dif­fer­en­ti­at­ed and buy­ers can feel the dif­fer­ence (a low price under­cuts the very thing win­ning your deals — use val­ue-based pric­ing instead); you sell high-tick­et, low-elas­tic­i­ty deals where buy­ers pri­or­i­tize qual­i­ty and a low price reads as a red flag; you are in a micro-niche where cus­tomers stay with incum­bents for rea­sons oth­er than price and switch­ing is rare regard­less of cost; a well-fund­ed com­peti­tor can out-dis­count you indef­i­nite­ly; or your run­way can­not sur­vive the trough.

If pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is off the table for you, you are not out of options — that is the impor­tant part. In a dif­fer­en­ti­at­ed cat­e­go­ry, val­ue-based pric­ing cap­tures a share of the mea­sur­able val­ue you cre­ate and typ­i­cal­ly sup­ports a high­er price, not a low­er one. In a cat­e­go­ry where your usage scales with cus­tomer suc­cess, usage-based pric­ing aligns your rev­enue with the cus­tomer’s growth and grows the account with­out a sin­gle rene­go­ti­a­tion. And in near­ly every case, the dis­ci­plined move is to run a real price test on new deals rather than assume you must go low — most SaaS com­pa­nies at $5M–$15M ARR dis­cov­er, when they final­ly test, that they are under­priced, not over­priced. The tool most founders reach for (a low price) is the oppo­site of the tool most of them actu­al­ly need.

Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a spe­cif­ic answer to a spe­cif­ic prob­lem: nobody will try you first in a crowd­ed cat­e­go­ry. If that is not your prob­lem, it is not your strat­e­gy — and reach­ing for it any­way is how you turn a pric­ing deci­sion into a per­ma­nent tax on your mar­gins.

Penetration Pricing FAQ

What is pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing in sim­ple terms? Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is set­ting your price delib­er­ate­ly below the mar­ket when you launch, to win cus­tomers and mar­ket share quick­ly in a crowd­ed cat­e­go­ry, then rais­ing the price lat­er once you have a locked-in base. The key is that the low price is tem­po­rary and planned — an entry ramp with a defined climb, not a per­ma­nent posi­tion.

What is the dif­fer­ence between pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing and price skim­ming? They are oppo­site strate­gies for oppo­site sit­u­a­tions. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing starts below the mar­ket and climbs, and it fits crowd­ed, com­modi­tized cat­e­gories where you need a rea­son for prospects to try you. Price skim­ming starts above the mar­ket and falls, and it fits nov­el or pre­mi­um prod­ucts with lit­tle direct com­pe­ti­tion where ear­ly adopters will pay a pre­mi­um. If a cat­e­go­ry is full of estab­lished incum­bents, skim­ming usu­al­ly has noth­ing to skim.

Is pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing a good long-term strat­e­gy? No — and it was nev­er meant to be one. Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is a short-term acqui­si­tion tac­tic with a built-in exit. The low price exists to buy share and a cus­tomer base, after which you climb to a sus­tain­able price. A com­pa­ny still run­ning its “intro­duc­to­ry” pen­e­tra­tion price years lat­er has not exe­cut­ed the strat­e­gy; it has per­ma­nent­ly under­priced itself, which is a dif­fer­ent and worse thing.

How low should a pen­e­tra­tion price be? Low enough to remove price as a rea­son to say no, but not so low that buy­ers doubt your qual­i­ty or you go under­wa­ter on every seat. The floor is your cost to serve at scale — a well-run pen­e­tra­tion price is aggres­sive but still pos­i­tive-mar­gin, as in the $25 exam­ple above where the com­pa­ny ran a 64% gross mar­gin even at the low price. Talk to buy­ers who fit your ide­al cus­tomer pro­file to find the num­ber that reads as “great deal” rather than “what’s wrong with it.”

Does pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing hurt cus­tomer life­time val­ue? It com­press­es cus­tomer life­time val­ue ear­ly, because pen­e­tra­tion-era cus­tomers pay less per peri­od and tend to retain worse than cus­tomers who chose you on val­ue. The strat­e­gy only improves life­time val­ue if two things hap­pen: you suc­cess­ful­ly raise price before those cus­tomers churn, and enough of them stay through the climb. Track life­time val­ue by acqui­si­tion cohort, not as a sin­gle blend­ed num­ber, or the low-price cohort’s weak­ness will hide inside your aver­age.

How does pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing affect my com­pa­ny’s val­u­a­tion? Indi­rect­ly, through the num­bers acquir­ers actu­al­ly pay for. Exe­cut­ed well, it builds ARR and, after a suc­cess­ful climb, restores the gross mar­gin and net rev­enue reten­tion that dri­ve rev­enue mul­ti­ples up. Exe­cut­ed bad­ly, it leaves you with a large but low-mar­gin, price-sen­si­tive, poor­ly-retain­ing base that drags the mul­ti­ple down. Same logo count, oppo­site val­u­a­tion — the dif­fer­ence is entire­ly in whether you climbed.

When should I avoid pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing entire­ly? When your prod­uct is gen­uine­ly dif­fer­en­ti­at­ed (a low price under­cuts your val­ue), when you sell high-tick­et deals to buy­ers who read low prices as a qual­i­ty warn­ing, when you are in a micro-niche where switch­ing is rare regard­less of price, when a deep­er-pock­et­ed com­peti­tor can out-dis­count you, or when your run­way can­not fund the low-mar­gin peri­od. In those cas­es a val­ue-based or usage-based approach — and a real price test — will serve you bet­ter than going low.

The Bottom Line

Pen­e­tra­tion pric­ing is one of the most mis­used strate­gies in SaaS, and the mis­use almost always runs in the same direc­tion: founders go low out of fear, call it strat­e­gy, and nev­er climb. Used that way, it is a slow-motion deci­sion to run a low-mar­gin, low-mul­ti­ple busi­ness for­ev­er. Used delib­er­ate­ly — with the four pre­con­di­tions actu­al­ly true, a thin-but-pos­i­tive mar­gin, real switch­ing cost built dur­ing the win­dow, and a dis­ci­plined climb on the far side — it is a legit­i­mate way to buy share in a cat­e­go­ry where noth­ing else gets you in the door.

The test is the same one that gov­erns every pric­ing deci­sion worth mak­ing. Can you state the price you are climb­ing to, the date you start climb­ing, and the switch­ing cost that makes the climb sur­viv­able? If yes, you may have a real pen­e­tra­tion strat­e­gy. If no, you do not have a strat­e­gy at all — you have a low price and a hope, and hope has nev­er once shown up on a cap table. Decide which one you are run­ning before the mar­ket decides for you.

For the machin­ery under­neath any pric­ing deci­sion, see SaaS unit eco­nom­ics, LTV/CAC, and the Rule of 40. For the full menu of pric­ing approach­es and where each fits, see the SaaS pric­ing strat­e­gy play­book and SaaS pric­ing mod­els. For the down­stream impact on reten­tion and exit val­ue, see net rev­enue reten­tion and SaaS rev­enue mul­ti­ples.

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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