In a recent interview I was asked a great question: What was the best advice that you’ve ever been given that you’ve taken to heart?  I knew my answer immediately: Know your value.

 

Stop devaluing yourself. Stop charging less than you’re worth. Stop taking less pay, fewer benefits and bad leadership. OWN your worth. I think that is the biggest lesson, the biggest. And I think it’s a big lesson for a lot of people. And once that finally clicked for me, which trust me, it took me a long time!  When I was finally able to say no, it is worth this much money and that is my fee, new, different clients stepped into my world. I am often questioned about me fee, it was interesting because I just went through it. You might have heard I closed BMW as a client here a couple of weeks ago.

 

BMW approached me to work with their team over a year. I actually had discounted it because they were agreeing to a year because if I can get a client to commit to a year of business, that’s very different than a client that just commits to a month, or one day right? And at one point, the decision maker said to me,  “Would you be willing to come down on this price? You’re pretty pricey based on what we’ve looked at out there.” And I said, “I’m the BMW of what I do. Are you willing to sell me a $70,000 BMW for $50,000?” Then he laughed. He said “no”. I said, “There you go.” The next day, he accepted the contract.

 

Knowing your value and the value of what you offer is one of the biggest and best pieces of advice I have ever been given. I will write more on this topic and HOW to determine it and get over the mental crap that might be stopping you as it did me.

Do you know your value?

Ann M. Evanston is a “Chief Breakthrough Officer” teaching other Business Warriors how to slow down, and find the most unique part of their business that makes them stand out among the crowd. She has been named one of the top marketing consultants by About.com, is a guest blogger for Showcasing Women and takes pride in moving you from “blah, blah, blah” to “BOOM, BOOM. BOOM!”