Price transparency isn’t just a finance decision—it’s a marketing power move. In a world of instant access and shrinking patience, brands that show their cards earn trust, drive conversions, and outmaneuver the competition.
I’ve been involved in product pricing strategies since the 80’s. I always thought it was one of the most important of the original 4P’s (Google it) that I learned in marketing school (it wasn’t really called “marketing school”, but roll with it.). From a marketing perspective, pricing has never been just about cost; it’s also about segmentation and positioning and perception…and trust. Yet, I’m constantly surprised by how often I still run into the dreaded “Contact Us for a Quote” button. In a world where nearly everything is instantly accessible, why are so many companies still hiding their prices? It’s a massive turnoff. If the sales team knows the price, why not just put it right there on the website?
It always feels like a bit of a sham—like they’re sizing me up to see what I can afford, or dragging me through a quoting process just to wear me down. Worst of all, maybe they think I need a salesperson to explain it and reel me in. If that’s the case, here’s a thought: become better marketers. Let the website do the work. Because if your pricing is too complicated to explain online, the problem isn’t the customer—maybe it’s the business model.
That got me thinking (and you know how dangerous that can be). Price transparency isn’t just about convenience. It’s about trust. And yet, so many companies are still stuck in this outdated, sales-driven mindset. It’s time they catch up. People are often ready to buy; they just don’t want to be sold.
Now, to be fair: for Business-to-business (B2B) brands with bespoke pricing models, you don’t always have a number you can slap on a landing page. And for certain service businesses (like marketing agencies) that have a tailored approach to match a business’s strategy, there may not be any expectation to have pricing. But that doesn’t get you off the hook. Price transparency isn’t the same as price publishing. Transparency is about eliminating fear and friction—by offering ranges, breakdowns, value comparisons, or even just a sense that the number you’ll get won’t be plucked from thin air based on what you can afford.
Trust Is the New Conversion Funnel
Price transparency signals respect. It tells buyers you’re not here to play games—and that you’ve thought enough about your offering to price it with confidence.
We tested that theory in a recent poll, asking: Does price transparency make a brand more trustworthy?
The results spoke for themselves. And the open responses told the real story: people don’t just want numbers—they want honesty. They want to feel like they’re not being hustled.
“If it’s something relatively easy to compare on price—retail, restaurants, etc.—it’s a good sign. If it’s complex, I’d rather communicate with the website.”
“Price transparency can definitely influence a brand’s trustworthiness, but it’s just one piece of the puzzle. When a company is upfront about pricing, it signals confidence in its value and fairness.”
“Transparent pricing is definitely among the top factors that increase a brand’s credibility. This, together with a good portfolio, can easily give the brand the edge it needs.”
That’s not just good feedback—it’s a blueprint. Transparency isn’t about spoon-feeding numbers. It’s about helping people feel like they’re making a sound, informed decision.
Take Everlane, the clothing brand that pioneered “Radical Transparency” by breaking down the cost of labor, materials, and transport on every product page.
And consumers eat it up: 94% say they’re more likely to be loyal to a brand that offers complete transparency (Label Insight, 2023). Why? Because transparency reduces suspicion. Suspicion kills conversion. And loyalty rarely blooms where suspicion festers.
Hidden Pricing Is the Fastest Way to Break the Sale
Whether it’s a SaaS subscription or a hotel room, vague pricing triggers decision paralysis. If a customer can’t understand what they’re going to pay—or worse, feels like they’re being lured into a trap—they hesitate. Then they bounce.
Canva, for instance, grew from a freemium design tool into a full-fledged enterprise platform by keeping its pricing visible, tiered, and refreshingly drama-free. No demos required. No PDFs labeled “custom pricing upon inquiry.” Just simple math.
According to the Baymard Institute, nearly 70% of online carts are abandoned, and “unexpected costs” remain one of the top culprits. Translation: opacity is expensive.
I Get It. Your Pricing Is Complicated. But That’s No Excuse.
Yes, your solution might have custom modules, usage thresholds, licensing quirks, and pricing that mysteriously spikes during a full moon. I’m not asking you to post your entire rate card. I’m asking you to acknowledge that your customer isn’t an idiot.
HubSpot does this well. Its pricing page covers every hub, add-on, and package, with a self-serve calculator and a side-by-side comparison to Salesforce. It even lets you preview your monthly invoice. (And yet, miraculously, they still manage to close seven-figure deals.)
B2B buyers, by the way, are doing most of their research before they ever talk to sales—81% of them, according to Demand Gen Report. So why not help them along? Show a range. Offer cost benchmarks. Compare your features to competitors. Basically, do the work they’re already doing—only better.
Transparency Doesn’t Just Build Trust—It Differentiates
In markets where everything feels the same and everyone promises “solutions,” clear pricing is a way to actually stand out. Not by being cheap, but by being confident.
Notion isn’t the only productivity platform out there, but it’s one of the few that makes it blindingly easy to understand what you get at each price point. Their comparison chart isn’t just informative—it’s strategic positioning.
This isn’t about racing to the bottom. In fact, transparent pricing often supports premium pricing, because customers understand the value. ProfitWell found that brands that clearly communicate pricing and value see a 30% boost in upsell conversion. It’s not about lowering the price. It’s about raising the comfort level.
Transparency Is the Brand Now
In industries plagued by distrust—healthcare, travel, telecom—pricing clarity isn’t a nice-to-have, it’s a reputation-maker.
Just look at Southwest Airlines. They don’t have seat assignments. Annoying! But they do have fanatical loyalty. Why? No change fees, no hidden baggage costs, no fine print to decode. What you see is what you get.
Sesame is doing the same in healthcare, offering fixed prices for doctor visits, procedures, and lab work—upfront, online, no insurance required. When 68% of consumers say hidden fees are their #1 brand trust killer (PwC, 2023), the brands that thrive will be the ones that stop hiding.
The Clock Is Ticking
Gen Z and Millennials aren’t just digital natives—they’re pricing natives. They grew up comparison shopping. They expect brands to be open, fair, and direct. If you won’t show them the cost, they’ll assume you have something to hide—and they’ll Google your competitor much faster than you can say “contact us for more details.”
Brands like Figma understood this from the start. Its freemium-to-enterprise model is transparent by design, and it’s one of the reasons enterprise adoption has skyrocketed.
McKinsey reports that 73% of Gen Z consumers rank transparency as more important than brand name. Think about that: trust beats heritage. Which means if your brand isn’t clear, it’s just noise.
Soon You Won’t Just Be Selling to People—You’ll Be Selling to Their Machines
Here’s the next twist in the plot: soon, your ideal customer won’t be a human scrolling through your landing page—it’ll be their AI agent doing it for them. And that agent? It doesn’t care about your brand storytelling, your lifestyle photography, or your moody case study video. It cares about clarity.
AI personal assistants, procurement bots, and enterprise agents are already being trained to scan for structured data, compare costs, and make decisions based on objective value. That means if your pricing is buried three clicks deep behind a “book a demo” form, you might as well be invisible.
Worse, if your competitor’s agent is trained to instantly generate tailored quotes based on user queries—and yours needs a discovery call and a PDF—guess who gets filtered out?
We’re entering an era where brands will market as much to machines as to people. So ask yourself: Is your pricing machine-readable? Can an AI agent parse your tiers, understand your offering, and put you on the shortlist?
Brands that get their pricing infrastructure in order now will have a massive head start. Because when AI agents are choosing for us, transparency won’t just build trust—it’ll be a prerequisite for being seen at all.
Final Thought: Trust Isn’t a Feature. It’s a Foundation.
Price transparency is a marketing tool that’s long overdue for a proper moment in the spotlight. It’s not about publishing a number—it’s about demonstrating that you’ve got nothing to hide. That you value the customer’s time. That you’re confident in your worth.
Whether you’re selling jeans, cloud software, or surgical procedures, the brands that win tomorrow are the ones that treat their customers like adults today.