Pricing Model

May 27th, 2026   |    By: Ryan RutanCMO    |    Tags: Business Planning, Pricing Strategy, Revenue Model, Go to Market Strategy, Business Model Canvas, Financial Model

Pricing Model

A pricing model is the structural mechanism by which a company charges customers, distinct from pricing strategy and revenue model. It encompasses the unit of pricing (per-seat, per-API-call, per-transaction, per-product, flat-platform), the structure of tiers and packages, and the relationship between value delivered and value captured. The main modern options are per-seat (classic SaaS), usage-based (infrastructure SaaS), tiered (good/better/best), flat (single price), per-outcome (rare but value-aligned), and hybrid combinations. Pricing model choice has significant implications for unit economics, sales motion, and customer behavior.

The main pricing models:

Per-seat / per-user:

  • Charge per active user or seat license.
  • Predictable per-customer revenue; scales with team adoption.
  • Common: Salesforce, Slack (historical), most enterprise SaaS.
  • Pros: predictable, easy to communicate, aligns with adoption.
  • Cons: can incentivize customers to share seats; doesn't capture usage value.

Usage-based:

  • Charge for consumption (API calls, storage, processed events, compute hours).
  • Aligns cost with customer value; scales with usage.
  • Common: Snowflake, AWS, Stripe, Twilio.
  • Pros: customer pays for value received; expansion automatic with growth.
  • Cons: less predictable revenue; harder for customer to budget.

Tiered / packaged:

  • Multiple plans (Starter, Pro, Enterprise) with different features and limits.
  • Common at most modern SaaS.
  • Pros: enables expansion via plan upgrades; covers different customer sizes.
  • Cons: can lock features inappropriately; complex pricing pages.

Flat / single-price:

  • One price for the product.
  • Simple but doesn't capture variable value.
  • Common at consumer subscription (Netflix, Spotify), early-stage SaaS.
  • Pros: simple to communicate; no negotiation.
  • Cons: doesn't capture value differences across customers.

Per-outcome:

  • Charge based on results achieved.
  • Aligns most closely with customer value.
  • Rare because hard to operationalize.
  • Common in some industries (legal contingency, performance marketing).

Freemium:

  • Free tier with paid upgrades.
  • Acquisition vehicle for paid conversion.
  • Common at SMB SaaS, developer tools.
  • Pros: low-friction acquisition; product-led growth.
  • Cons: many free users never convert; support costs for non-payers.

Hybrid:

  • Combinations: per-seat + usage overage, flat platform fee + per-transaction.
  • Common at modern companies that found pure models too rigid.
  • Captures different value dimensions.

How to choose the right model:

Match to how customers derive value:

  • Value scales with team size → per-seat.
  • Value scales with consumption → usage-based.
  • Value varies by features needed → tiered.
  • Value is binary or uniform → flat.

Consider sales motion:

  • Sales-led typically works with per-seat or tiered enterprise contracts.
  • Product-led works with freemium or usage-based.

Consider customer budgeting:

  • Customers prefer predictable costs.
  • Pure usage-based can create budget anxiety.
  • Caps or commit-and-overage hybrid models address this.

Ryan's Take

Pricing model is the structural choice that determines how customers experience your pricing and how value flows to you. The discipline that works: match the model to how customers actually derive value; consider sales motion fit; provide some predictability for customer budgeting. The trend is toward hybrid models (per-seat + usage overage, commit + consumption) because pure models often miss nuance. Pricing model evolution is normal as the business matures; don't assume initial choice is permanent.

What founders get wrong: Choosing pricing model based on what competitors do rather than how customers derive value. The right discipline: match to value structure, consider sales motion, allow for evolution as business matures.

Related: [Pricing Strategy] · [Revenue Model] · [Go to Market Strategy] · [Business Model Canvas] · [Financial Model]

FAQ

What is a pricing model? The structural mechanism by which a company charges customers, including the unit of pricing (per-seat, per-API-call, etc.), structure of tiers, and relationship between value delivered and captured. Distinct from pricing strategy (positioning and price points).

What are the main pricing models? Per-seat (classic SaaS, Salesforce), usage-based (Snowflake, AWS), tiered (good/better/best, common modern SaaS), flat (Netflix, Spotify), per-outcome (rare), freemium (SMB SaaS), and hybrid (combinations like per-seat + usage overage).

How do I choose the right pricing model? Match to how customers derive value (team size = per-seat, consumption = usage-based, feature needs = tiered). Consider sales motion fit (sales-led typically tiered; product-led typically freemium or usage). Provide some predictability for customer budgeting.


About the Author

Ryan Rutan

Founding Partner @ Startups.com platform | Clarity.fm, Launchrock, Fundable, Zirtual, and Co-Host of The Startup Therapy Podcast. Ryan has 15 years of experience as a Founder, Advisor, Mentor, and Investor — the quintessential startup guerrilla. He works with 100's of the best startups every year on everything from ideation, idea validation, early marketing traction, customer acquisition to fundraising, scaling, and operations.

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