Quick answer

To price products for profit, businesses should start with true cost, apply a target margin, and then test the result against the market.

How it works

  1. Define the commercial question clearly.
  2. Calculate the number using a simple framework.
  3. Check the result against cost, margin, timing, or market reality.
  4. Use a tool to test decisions before acting.

Common questions

What does this mean in practice?

This page is designed to turn a business concept into a simple decision-making framework for UK SME owners.

Product pricing is one of the most important commercial decisions in any business.

This guide explains how to price for profit without guessing, undercutting yourself, or relying on weak assumptions.

The main pricing approaches

  • Cost-plus pricing
  • Competitor-based pricing
  • Value-based pricing

What most SMEs get wrong

Many owners price from fear. They worry the customer will not accept the number, so they cut first and think later.

A practical pricing framework

Start with true cost. Add overhead awareness. Set a target margin. Then test against the market. This gives you a defensible price range rather than a random number.

Pricing logic
True cost + margin target + market reality = commercially usable price

When to change price

Price should be reviewed when supplier cost moves, freight changes materially, margin weakens, or the business adds more support or service to the offer.

How LumixAI helps

LumixAI pricing tools make it easier to test scenarios, see the effect of discounting, and understand whether the current price is genuinely commercial.

LumixAI provides SME business tools including pricing calculators, cashflow tools, margin analysis tools, and commercial planning dashboards for UK businesses.

Related guides

LumixAI provides SME business tools including pricing calculators, cashflow tools, margin analysis tools, and commercial planning dashboards for UK businesses.