Value Ladder Strategy — Step-by-Step Conversion from Free to Premium
$0 → $7 → $97 → $997 → $10,000+ — Designing the structure to move customers up one step at a time
Value Ladder is a structure where you "provide progressively more value to customers while gradually increasing the price." Systematized in Russell Brunson's book DotCom Secrets.
Core Principle: Why a Ladder?
You can't sell a $10,000 product to a stranger. But by climbing free → $7 → $97 → $997, building trust at each step, you can eventually sell premium services of $10,000+.
At each step, customers gain confidence that "this person/company delivers value worth this price" and become ready to spend on the next level.
Typical Ladder Structure
| Step | Name | Price Range | Role | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Lead Magnet | Free | Collect leads | Free eBook, checklist, webinar |
| 1 | Tripwire | $7-$47 | First payment experience | Mini course, cheap template |
| 2 | Core Offer | $97-$497 | Main product | Online course, SaaS subscription |
| 3 | Profit Maximizer | $997-$4,997 | Maximize revenue | Masterclass, annual subscription |
| 4 | High-Ticket | $5,000+ | Premium service | 1:1 coaching, custom consulting |
Psychological Mechanism at Each Step
Tripwire ($7-$47): The price doesn't matter. The goal is getting them to take the action of paying. Once someone pulls out their card, psychological resistance to the second payment drops dramatically.
Core Offer ($97-$497): The real problem-solving product. If customers feel they "got their money's worth," they're ready for the next step.
High-Ticket ($5,000+): Only 1-5% of customers climb this high, but they represent a significant portion of revenue.
Common Mistakes
Skipping steps: Jumping from free to $997 kills conversion
Insufficient value gaps: If $7 and $97 products feel similar, there's no reason to upgrade
Single product only: One price point leaves money on the table from customers willing to pay more
Building backwards: Creating expensive products first misses the trust-building opportunity
Execution Steps
Step 0: Lead Magnet (free) — collect prospect emails
Step 1: Tripwire ($7-47) — first payment (break psychological barrier)
Step 2: Core Offer ($97-497) — solve real problems with main product
Step 3: Profit Maximizer ($997+) — deeper value to existing customers
Step 4: High-Ticket ($5,000+) — premium service for top 1-5% customers
Pros
- ✓ Maximize customer lifetime value (LTV) — multiple sales per customer
- ✓ Upgrading existing customers is 5-25x cheaper than acquiring new ones
- ✓ Trust accumulates at each step, improving conversion rates
- ✓ Top 1-5% High-Ticket customers drive a large share of total revenue
Cons
- ✗ Significant time needed to design and build the entire ladder
- ✗ Burden of creating separate products/content for each step
- ✗ Unclear value gaps between steps cause "why should I pay more?" drop-off
- ✗ For solo operators, High-Ticket (1:1) services don't scale with time