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If you care deeply, it’s easy to equate “being helpful” with saying yes, adding extras, or softening your price. The result: resentment, confusion, and work that no longer feels good. Valuing your work isn’t pushy—it’s clear, kind, and sustainable.
• Pre-emptive discounts. Instead: price the scope you can deliver with excellence.
• Over-customizing for free. Instead: “That add-on is available as a separate option.”
• Apologizing for boundaries. Instead: “I can give this my full attention on Thursday at 10am.”
C—Clarify the result, scope, and limits before you quote.
L—Line in the sand: one sentence that protects time and quality.
E—Express neutrally (no apology, no over-explaining).
A—Align price with value delivered (not hours only).
R—Review after each proposal: where did you wobble, and what will you revise?
• “Here’s what’s included; if you’d like X, I can price that as an add-on.”
• “To keep quality high, my timeline for this is ____.”
• “My rate for this scope is $____; happy to answer questions.”
Old scripts like “charging is selfish” or “good people over-give” can keep you stuck. I cover simple reframes in Income.pdf—DM “INCOME” if you’d like that short guide.
• Keep a small “price integrity” card at your desk with your baseline packages.
• Visual order supports follow-through: clear one arm’s-length of desk space before pricing important work.
• Stand when you state your price (even on the phone)—your body posture supports your voice.
If you want a safe, practical space to practice these conversations and build self-trust, book a Complimentary 30-Minute Breakthrough Coaching Session. We’ll tailor scripts to your situations.
→ Calendly: https://calendly.com/linda-85/complimentary-breakthrough-coaching-session
Resources mentioned: Value Me: Stop Discounting Yourself (DM “VALUE”), Income.pdf (DM “INCOME”).
Linda Binns
The Breakthrough Energy Expert
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