Why 72% of Innovations Fail from Monetization Errors
Ramanujam's research across 10,000+ monetization projects reveals that most new offerings don't fail because they're bad. They fail because nobody figured out how to price them before building them.
You've spent six months building something new. A certification tier. A diagnostic module. A premium advisory offering. You've invested time, money, and creative energy. The product is genuinely good — your beta testers said so. You're proud of it.
You launch it. And then you discover that nobody will pay what you need to charge.
Not because the offering is flawed. Not because the market doesn't exist. Because you set the price based on what felt right — your internal cost structure, a competitor's listed rate, a gut sense of what the market would bear — and you guessed wrong. The price is either too high (and nobody converts) or too low (and you can't sustain the economics). Either way, a perfectly good innovation dies from a monetization error.
Madhavan Ramanujam, drawing on data from more than 10,000 monetization projects at Simon-Kucher, quantifies the scale of this problem: 72% of innovations fail because of monetization errors. Not technology errors. Not market-fit errors. Monetization errors. The product works. The market exists. The price is wrong.
That number should fundamentally change how you approach every new service offering you create.
The Four Monetization Failures
Which One Is Killing Your New Offering?
Ramanujam doesn't just identify the problem. He categorizes it into four distinct failure types, each with different symptoms and different solutions.
Feature Shock. You built too much. The offering has so many components, tiers, and options that the buyer is overwhelmed. They can't evaluate the value because there's too much to evaluate. In service businesses, feature shock shows up as the 20-page proposal that covers every possible engagement permutation. The buyer doesn't know what they're buying, so they buy nothing — or they ask for a "simpler option," which you haven't designed.
Minivation. You built something too small to justify charging for. A minor methodology update. A supplementary tool. A nice-to-have diagnostic add-on. It's genuinely useful but not valuable enough for buyers to open their wallets. Minivations consume development resources without generating meaningful revenue. The fix isn't to make the offering cheaper — it's to either bundle it into a larger package or kill it entirely.
Hidden Gem. You built something genuinely valuable but priced it too low or positioned it incorrectly. The offering works brilliantly for a narrow segment of buyers, but your marketing targets everyone instead. A hidden gem certification tier that's perfect for enterprise practitioners gets buried in messaging aimed at solo consultants. The product isn't the problem. The go-to-market strategy is.
Undead. The scariest category. An offering that should have been killed but wasn't because the organization was too invested to let go. The economics don't work. The market signals are negative. But sunk costs and emotional attachment keep it alive, consuming resources that could fund something viable. In methodology businesses, undead offerings often manifest as certification tiers that nobody signs up for, kept on the website "just in case."
Most founders, when a new offering underperforms, default to the same response: lower the price. Ramanujam's data says that's the right answer for only one of these four failure types. For the other three, a price cut makes things worse.
The Root Cause: Building First, Pricing Later
How the Build-Then-Price Sequence Creates Failure
The most common monetization error across all 10,000+ projects Ramanujam studied is also the most preventable: setting prices based on internal logic rather than market evidence.
The internal logic goes like this: "It costs us X to deliver this offering, we need Y margin, so we should charge Z." Or: "Competitor A charges $5,000, Competitor B charges $8,000, so we should price somewhere in between." Or the worst version: "This feels like it should cost about $3,000."
All three approaches share the same flaw: they never ask the buyer. They substitute the founder's assumptions for the market's willingness to pay. And the founder's assumptions are almost always wrong — not because founders are bad at pricing, but because the information they need doesn't exist inside their own heads. It exists in conversations with the people who would actually buy the thing.
Ramanujam's prescription is counterintuitive for most builders: design the price before you design the product. Not after. Before.
This doesn't mean picking a number out of thin air. It means conducting structured willingness-to-pay research before investing in development. What would buyers pay for this? At what price is it an obvious yes? At what price do they start to hesitate? At what price is it a definite no? Map those responses. Find the clusters. Design the offering to match the price point the market will support.
If the price the market will support doesn't justify the development cost, you've just saved yourself six months of building something that will fail. That's the most valuable outcome of willingness-to-pay research — not the products it prices correctly, but the products it kills before they waste your time.
The Three-Question WTP Framework
How to Validate Pricing in 30 Conversations
Willingness-to-pay research sounds academic. In practice, it's three questions asked across 30-50 potential buyers.
Question 1: "At what price would this be a great deal — an obvious yes?" This establishes the floor. Below this price, everyone would buy, but you might be leaving significant money on the table. It also reveals what the buyer considers "cheap" for this category, which is useful competitive intelligence.
Question 2: "At what price would you start to question whether it's worth it?" This identifies the zone of resistance. It's not a no — it's a pause. The buyer needs more convincing at this price. The gap between Question 1 and Question 2 is your pricing range — the space within which most buyers will convert with adequate value communication.
Question 3: "At what price would you definitely say no, regardless of quality?" This reveals the ceiling — the point beyond which no amount of positioning, social proof, or value articulation will close the deal. Pricing above this ceiling means targeting a different buyer segment entirely.
When you map these three responses across 30-50 conversations, patterns emerge that individual conversations can't reveal.
You'll typically find distinct buyer clusters. Ramanujam categorizes them by behavior, not demographics: "credential seekers" who have lower willingness-to-pay but higher volume potential, "revenue builders" in the moderate range, and "strategic buyers" who pay premium prices but exist in smaller numbers. Each cluster suggests a different pricing tier — which is why well-designed service offerings have multiple options rather than a single price point.
You'll also find price cliffs — thresholds where demand drops sharply. If you discover a cliff between $3,000 and $5,000, your pricing should sit clearly on one side or the other. The dead zone between a cliff and the next stable demand band is where offerings go to fail quietly.
"The most common pricing error is setting prices based on internal logic rather than market evidence. The information you need doesn't exist inside your own head. It exists in conversations with the people who would actually buy the thing."
Thirty conversations. Three questions each. That's less than a week of focused research. And it prevents the monetization error that kills 72% of new offerings.
The Timberland Paradox
When Charging More Actually Increases Demand
Beckwith tells the story of Timberland boots. The company was struggling. They raised prices above the competition. Sales went up. The higher price signaled quality that the product — identical to its cheaper past version — hadn't communicated before.
In professional services, this effect is amplified. Quality is completely invisible before purchase. A client can't test-drive a consulting engagement. They can't sample a certification before committing. In the absence of other quality signals, price becomes the most powerful proxy available. A diagnostic methodology priced at $15,000 is perceived as more rigorous than one priced at $2,000 — even when both contain identical questions.
This creates a counterintuitive monetization error that Ramanujam's taxonomy doesn't explicitly name but that service businesses encounter constantly: underpricing that reduces demand. The price is too low to be credible. Buyers assume something must be missing — shortcuts in the methodology, junior staff doing the work, a superficial assessment. The low price intended to attract clients actually repels them.
Simon's research quantifies the implication: underpricing doesn't make you more competitive. It makes you less credible. When you charge less than your competitors, you're not signaling "great value." You're signaling "less capable."
This is why the willingness-to-pay framework is so valuable. It doesn't just tell you the maximum people will pay — it reveals the minimum below which they lose trust. Price too high and you lose volume. Price too low and you lose credibility. The three-question framework maps both boundaries.
Applying This to Your Next Launch
Whether you're launching a new certification tier, a premium diagnostic module, a group advisory program, or any other service offering, the sequence should be:
1. Define the concept. Not the full product — the concept. What outcome does it deliver? Who is it for? What problem does it solve? One paragraph. Not a spec sheet.
2. Run the three-question WTP framework. Thirty conversations. Map the responses. Identify clusters, cliffs, and the viable pricing range.
3. Design the offering to fit the price. Not the other way around. If the market will pay $8,000 for a premium certification, design a certification experience that justifies $8,000. If the market will only pay $2,000, design something deliverable at that price point — or don't build it.
4. Structure tiers around buyer segments. Credential seekers get the base tier. Revenue builders get the enhanced tier. Strategic buyers get the premium tier. Each tier is priced to match its segment's willingness-to-pay, not your cost-to-deliver.
5. Test the free-to-paid transition deliberately. If you offer a free version of anything — a free diagnostic, a free introductory module — you must engineer the jump to paid with care. Simon's research shows the danger: free usage anchors expectations at zero. The psychological gap from $0 to any positive number is far larger than the gap from $5,000 to $7,500. Never let free feel permanent. Always show what the paid version includes that the free version doesn't.
This sequence inverts the way most service businesses launch. Most build first and price later. The 72% failure rate tells you how that approach ends.
Price first. Build to the price. Let the market tell you what it values before you invest in creating it. It's less romantic than building on inspiration. It's also three times more likely to succeed.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.