More startups are asking a simple question with a big impact: should we show our pricing or make people talk to sales?
At HelloAdvisr, we help founders answer by asking a better one: what story does your pricing tell, and who needs to hear it? Your visibility choice is a positioning decision, a conversion lever, and a trust signal all at once.
Buyers do not like mystery, especially when they are trying to shortlist vendors quickly. Publishing pricing helps you:
The expectations are clear. In TrustRadius’ B2B Buying Disconnect research, 81% of buyers say they want to see pricing on vendor websites during evaluation, yet many vendors still hide it (TrustRadius). That gap creates unnecessary friction and slows decisions. Publishing closes the gap and signals confidence.
For a consumer masterclass in visible pricing that still protects leverage, study Netflix’s model in Mastering Subscription Services and Tiered Pricing with Netflix. Clear tiers, clear trade-offs, and narrative control.
There are valid reasons to keep pricing off the page:
In these cases, controlling the sales narrative matters. You can lead with discovery, quantify value, and tailor a proposal that fits usage, compliance, and service requirements. The key is to explain why prices are custom so it does not look evasive. Use simple copy such as: “Pricing varies with data volume, integrations, and compliance. We publish ranges and build a right-sized proposal after a short discovery.”
We unpack how companies maintain pricing power while evolving their offers in Breaking Down Pricing Power: How Netflix Flexes Its Market Muscle.
You do not have to choose a single path. Many successful SaaS companies mix transparency and consultation:
This hybrid approach matches how different buyers purchase. SMB buyers want speed and clarity. Mid-market and enterprise buyers want tailored scope, proof, and risk management. You respect both.
Use this quick test to choose your default:
Revisit this matrix as your product, ICP, and motion evolve. Your visibility choice should track your growth strategy, not habit.
If you choose transparency, you can still protect margins and upsell paths:
If your model requires consultation, remove uncertainty without posting a number:
The goal is clarity. Even when numbers are custom, buyers want to know what will happen next.
Publishing or hiding is not a moral choice, it is a strategy choice. Your pricing should tell the right story to the right buyer at the right time. If your model is straightforward and self-serve, publish confidently. If the value depends on complex deployments, guide buyers with ranges and a fast path to a tailored quote. In either case, clarity builds trust, and trust converts.