Assessment: Is Your Pricing Strategy Sound? (Self-Check)

A diagnostic self-assessment for architecture and interior design studios. Score your pricing strategy across 7 dimensions and identify exactly where it's broken.

A diagnostic self-assessment for architecture and interior design studios. Score your pricing strategy across 7 dimensions and identify exactly where it's broken.

Sales & Pricing Strategy

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You review your portfolio regularly. You assess your team's performance. You audit your project timelines and client satisfaction. But when was the last time you systematically evaluated your pricing strategy?

Most design studios have never formally assessed whether their pricing approach is healthy, strategic, or sustainable. They adjust fees reactively — a little up here, a discount there — without ever stepping back to evaluate the system as a whole.

If your pricing decisions feel like guesswork rather than strategy, it's because they are. This article is your diagnostic tool. Answer honestly, and you'll know exactly where your pricing needs attention.




Guessing ≠ Strategising: What's the Difference?


Guessing means setting fees based on instinct, competitor comparison, or client reaction. It answers: "What number feels about right?"

Strategising means setting fees based on positioning, value analysis, market research, and deliberate framework design. It answers: "What fee structure maximises revenue while attracting our ideal clients?"


Guessing (Reactive)

Strategising (Deliberate)

Prices based on what competitors charge

Prices based on the value delivered to clients

Adjusts fees only when forced

Reviews and updates fees on a schedule

No documented pricing framework

Clear pricing tiers, minimums, and policies

Fees vary based on mood or client

Fees are consistent and defensible

Can't explain pricing decisions

Can articulate the logic behind every fee


This assessment will help you determine which side you're on — and where to focus your improvement efforts. Be honest. The only person who loses from a generous self-score is you.




The 7-Dimension Pricing Health Check


Score each dimension from 1 (poor) to 5 (excellent). Total your score at the end.


Dimension 1: Pricing Foundation
  • Do you have a documented pricing framework (not just numbers in your head)?

  • Can you articulate why your fees are what they are — beyond "that's what we've always charged"?

  • Have you defined minimum project fees that you never go below?

  • Score 1 if you price from instinct each time. Score 5 if you have a written, reviewed pricing framework.


Dimension 2: Value Alignment
  • Do your fees reflect the value clients receive, or the hours you spend?

  • Do you price differently for projects with different client value (e.g., commercial vs. residential)?

  • Can you explain your fee in terms of client outcomes rather than your inputs?

  • Score 1 if every fee is calculated from hours × rate. Score 5 if fees are set by project value and complexity.


Dimension 3: Fee Presentation
  • Do you present fees live (in person or on a call) or only by email?

  • Do your proposals include tiered options?

  • Is your fee framed within context (scope, deliverables, outcomes) or presented as a standalone number?

  • Score 1 if you email a single number. Score 5 if you present tiered proposals with value framing in person.


Dimension 4: Pricing Confidence
  • Can you state your fee without softening language ("roughly," "around," "flexible")?

  • Do you lead the pricing conversation or wait for the client to ask?

  • When a client objects, do you explore the objection or immediately discount?

  • Score 1 if you avoid pricing conversations. Score 5 if you lead them with confidence.


Dimension 5: Scope Management
  • Do your agreements clearly define what's included and what triggers additional fees?

  • Do you charge for scope changes, or absorb them?

  • Have you ever tracked how much unpaid scope creep costs you annually?

  • Score 1 if scope is undefined and creep is absorbed. Score 5 if every agreement has clear boundaries and change-order processes.


Dimension 6: Regular Review
  • Do you review and adjust your fees at least once per year?

  • Have your fees increased in the last 12 months?

  • Do you track win rates, average project values, and effective hourly rates?

  • Score 1 if fees haven't changed in 2+ years. Score 5 if you review annually with data-driven adjustments.


Dimension 7: Market Positioning
  • Does your pricing match your brand positioning (premium, mid-range, accessible)?

  • Are you attracting clients who value quality, or clients who prioritise low cost?

  • Would a stranger looking at your website guess a fee range that matches your actual fees?

  • Score 1 if pricing and positioning are misaligned. Score 5 if they reinforce each other perfectly.




Interpreting Your Score


Score Range

Assessment

Priority Action

7–14

Critical — your pricing is costing you significant revenue

Build a pricing foundation from scratch: define minimums, create a framework, and start presenting fees differently

15–21

Developing — you have some good instincts but no system

Formalise your approach: document your framework, create tiered proposals, and schedule annual reviews

22–28

Solid — your pricing strategy is working but has gaps

Focus on the lowest-scoring dimensions and refine your value communication

29–35

Excellent — you have a mature, strategic pricing system

Optimise and innovate: test new pricing models, expand tiers, and mentor your team on pricing skills




Why This Matters More Now Than Ever


Pricing strategy isn't a set-and-forget exercise:

  • Market conditions change annually — costs rise, client expectations shift, competitors adjust

  • Studios that don't assess their pricing regularly fall behind without realising it

  • The gap between strategically priced studios and reactively priced studios widens every year

  • Clients are more sophisticated about pricing than ever — they reward studios that price with clarity and professionalism


Clients silently assess:

  • Does this studio have a professional approach to pricing, or are they making it up?

  • Is the fee structure clear and well-considered?

  • Do I feel confident that this fee represents good value?

  • Is this studio running a business or winging it?


A pricing strategy that scored well three years ago may score poorly today. Markets move, and your pricing needs to move with them.




What to Do With Your Results


1. Address your lowest-scoring dimension first

Don't try to fix everything at once. Identify the dimension where you scored lowest and dedicate the next 30 days to improving it. If it's pricing foundation, write your framework. If it's confidence, practise presenting fees. If it's scope management, rewrite your agreements. One dimension improved by two points will have more impact than spreading effort across all seven.


2. Schedule a quarterly pricing review

Put it in your calendar: once per quarter, spend 90 minutes reviewing your pricing data — win rates, average project values, discount frequency, and effective hourly rates. Identify trends and make adjustments. Data removes emotion from pricing decisions. When you can see that your win rate is 90%, the data — not your feelings — tells you to raise fees.


3. Retake this assessment every six months

Pricing maturity is a journey, not a destination. Retake this assessment every six months to track your progress and identify new areas for improvement. The studios with the best pricing strategies are the ones that never stop refining them.


4. Share the assessment with your team

If you have partners or senior team members who participate in pricing decisions, have them take the assessment independently, then compare scores. The gaps between your answers reveal misalignment in your pricing approach. A pricing strategy only works if everyone on the team understands and applies it consistently.




The Bottom Line


You can't improve what you don't measure — and most studios have never measured their pricing health.

This assessment isn't a test with a pass or fail. It's a diagnostic that reveals where your pricing strategy is strong and where it needs work. The studios charging premium fees didn't arrive there by accident. They systematically built, tested, and refined their pricing approach — and they continue to do so.

If your score was lower than you expected, that's not a failure. It's a starting point. And a starting point is infinitely better than the pricing autopilot most studios are on.

How did your studio score?


If the assessment revealed gaps in your pricing strategy, you don’t need to guess what to fix first. Get a bespoke 90‑day pricing action plan tailored to your lowest‑scoring areas.

Get your 90-day plan

Want to see where your studio stands?

Download the free checklist to review your studio’s positioning, online presence, and client-facing communication — and identify the areas that may need more clarity, consistency, or structure.

Download the Free Checklist