monetizing-innovation

monetizing-innovation

Use when asked about "pricing strategy", "willingness to pay", "value metric", "packaging tiers", "good better best pricing", "subscription vs usage pricing", or "price before product". Helps design products customers will pay for and choose pricing models that capture value. Based on Madhavan Ramanujam's Monetizing Innovation framework from Simon-Kucher.

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Обновлено 1/19/2026
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monetizing-innovation
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Use when asked about "pricing strategy", "willingness to pay", "value metric", "packaging tiers", "good better best pricing", "subscription vs usage pricing", or "price before product". Helps design products customers will pay for and choose pricing models that capture value. Based on Madhavan Ramanujam's Monetizing Innovation framework from Simon-Kucher.

Monetizing Innovation

What It Is

Monetizing Innovation is a framework for designing products that customers need, value, AND are willing to pay for. The core insight: price is not a number you slap on at the end — it's a measure of value that should guide what you build from the start.

The key shift: Move from "build the product, then figure out pricing" to "understand willingness to pay, then design the product around it."

72% of innovations fail from a monetization perspective — not because the product is bad, but because companies never validated that customers would actually pay for it.

Credit: This framework is based on Monetizing Innovation by Madhavan Ramanujam and Georg Tacke of Simon-Kucher & Partners, the world's leading pricing strategy consulting firm.

When to Use It

Use Monetizing Innovation when you need to:

  • Validate product ideas before investing engineering resources
  • Prioritize your roadmap based on what drives willingness to pay
  • Choose a pricing model (subscription, usage, hybrid, outcome-based)
  • Design packaging tiers (good/better/best) that convert
  • Increase revenue without building new features
  • Avoid leaving money on the table or underpricing
  • Prepare for price negotiations in B2B sales
  • Navigate pricing in a downturn without destroying value

When Not to Use It

  • Commoditized markets where you have no pricing power
  • Regulated pricing environments (healthcare, utilities)
  • Very early discovery — you need a product concept to test willingness to pay against
  • Consumer products with pure network effects where monetization must wait (though even then, understand your future model)

Patterns

Detailed examples showing how to apply Monetizing Innovation correctly. Each pattern shows a common mistake and the correct approach.

Critical (get these wrong and you've wasted your time)

Pattern What It Teaches
pricing-after-building Have willingness to pay conversations BEFORE building, not after
asking-what-to-charge Never ask "what should I charge?" — use relative and indirect methods
wrong-value-metric The metric you charge on determines everything — get it right
giving-farm-away 20% of features drive 80% of willingness to pay — don't give them away free
one-size-fits-none Segment by needs and willingness to pay, not demographics

High Impact

Pattern What It Teaches
features-not-benefits Pitch benefits (what customers get) not features (what you built)
cost-plus-pricing Price based on customer value, not your costs
discounting-to-close Trade value for discounts — never give without getting
land-without-expand Design your land offer so there's room to expand
ignoring-thresholds Psychological price thresholds exist — find and respect them
rushing-pricing-model How you charge matters more than how much — choose deliberately

Medium Impact

Pattern What It Teaches
missing-decoy Use behavioral pricing (decoys, anchoring, compromise effect)
static-segmentation Customers change segments — capture value dynamically
poc-without-commitment POCs should build business cases, not just test features

Deep Dives

Read only when you need extra detail.

  • references/monetizing-innovation-playbook.md: Expanded framework detail, checklists, and examples.

Resources

Books:

  • Monetizing Innovation by Madhavan Ramanujam & Georg Tacke — the foundational framework
  • Scaling Innovation by Madhavan Ramanujam — sequel on acquisition, monetization, retention
  • Confessions of the Pricing Man by Hermann Simon — founder of Simon-Kucher's lessons

Other:

  • Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely — behavioral economics foundations
  • Kyle Poyar / OpenView — PLG pricing research and guides
  • First Round Review pricing content — case studies and frameworks

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