PodcastsRank #17771
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Emerge Dynamics Podcast

ManagementPodcastsBusinessEntrepreneurshipEN-USunited-states
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The podcast for middle market private company managers and owners
Top 35.5% by pitch volume (Rank #17771 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

Publishes
N/A
Episodes
92
Founded
N/A
Category
Management
Number of listeners
Private
Hidden on public pages

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Public snapshot
Audience: Under 4K / month
Canonical: https://podpitch.com/podcasts/emerge-dynamics-podcast
Reply rate: Under 2%

Latest Episodes

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Episode 92: Pricing Strategy For Success – Part 2

Thu Jan 08 2026

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Episode Overview In this second episode of the pricing series, hosts David and Eric bridge from pricing theory into practical strategy and application. They explore the critical differences between cost-plus and value-based pricing, discuss price elasticity, and provide actionable frameworks for optimizing pricing in middle-market private companies. Key Topics Covered 1. Marginal Buyer Theory Recap The last buyer-seller transaction indicates market pricing potential Prices function as market signals about resource value Ignoring the marginal buyer leaves money on the table 2. Price Elasticity of Demand High Elasticity: Small price changes cause significant market share loss (e.g., hotdog industry – one penny change = major impact) Low Elasticity: Price changes have minimal impact on customer retention Revenue optimization: Selling at 2x price with only 5% customer loss increases overall revenue and profit 3. Cost-Plus Pricing When It Makes Sense: Regulated industries (utilities, government contracts) Commoditized products New product launches (to establish break-even baseline) How to Calculate: Add all direct costs (materials, labor, freight) Allocate indirect costs (rent, depreciation, admin) Calculate total unit cost Apply markup based on contract requirements or industry standards Limitations: Focuses energy on cost side, not demand side Misses shifts in market dynamics and pricing power Leaves value on the table from marginal payers Doesn’t account for subjective customer value 4. Value-Based Pricing Core Principle: Maximize profitability by capturing the value created for customers Implementation Steps: Identify the specific problem your product/service solves Quantify the cost of the problem to your customer Lost sales Production inefficiencies Higher operational costs Calculate economic value created What would alternative solutions cost? What’s the total economic benefit? Set pricing below total value to ensure customer benefit Example: If your solution creates $100K/year in value Pricing at $100K = customer breaks even Pricing below $100K = customer realizes net benefit Consider multi-year value (Year 1: break-even, Year 2+: 100% profit to customer) 5. Pricing Optimization Strategies For Established Businesses: Run pricing experiments to optimize revenue and profit Test different price points carefully (consider elasticity) Create multiple proposal versions with different pricing Differentiate by geography or market segment Track conversion rates and customer response Key Insight: Value pricing aligns your interests with customer interests – if you’re not bringing value, you shouldn’t be in business together. Action Items for Listeners Complete the homework from Episode 1 analyze your data using marginal buyer theory Quantify the economic value your product/service creates for customers Calculate what alternative solutions would cost your customers Begin pricing experiments in your business (if appropriate for your industry) Prepare for Episode 3 Coming Up Next Hourly pricing vs. value-based pricing for services Comprehensive pricing strategy framework Putting all the pricing concepts together Key Quotes “A price is not something you set, even though yes, you do set them, it’s more of a signal of what the market is saying about the value of certain resources.” “Value pricing always aligns ourselves to the interest of the customer and the client. If we’re not bringing them value, then what the heck are we doing?” “When all of your pricing energy is going to the cost side, you’re paying less attention to the demand side.” Resources Episode 1: Pricing Theory & Marginal Buyer Concept Economist referenced: Ludwig von Mises

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Episode Overview In this second episode of the pricing series, hosts David and Eric bridge from pricing theory into practical strategy and application. They explore the critical differences between cost-plus and value-based pricing, discuss price elasticity, and provide actionable frameworks for optimizing pricing in middle-market private companies. Key Topics Covered 1. Marginal Buyer Theory Recap The last buyer-seller transaction indicates market pricing potential Prices function as market signals about resource value Ignoring the marginal buyer leaves money on the table 2. Price Elasticity of Demand High Elasticity: Small price changes cause significant market share loss (e.g., hotdog industry – one penny change = major impact) Low Elasticity: Price changes have minimal impact on customer retention Revenue optimization: Selling at 2x price with only 5% customer loss increases overall revenue and profit 3. Cost-Plus Pricing When It Makes Sense: Regulated industries (utilities, government contracts) Commoditized products New product launches (to establish break-even baseline) How to Calculate: Add all direct costs (materials, labor, freight) Allocate indirect costs (rent, depreciation, admin) Calculate total unit cost Apply markup based on contract requirements or industry standards Limitations: Focuses energy on cost side, not demand side Misses shifts in market dynamics and pricing power Leaves value on the table from marginal payers Doesn’t account for subjective customer value 4. Value-Based Pricing Core Principle: Maximize profitability by capturing the value created for customers Implementation Steps: Identify the specific problem your product/service solves Quantify the cost of the problem to your customer Lost sales Production inefficiencies Higher operational costs Calculate economic value created What would alternative solutions cost? What’s the total economic benefit? Set pricing below total value to ensure customer benefit Example: If your solution creates $100K/year in value Pricing at $100K = customer breaks even Pricing below $100K = customer realizes net benefit Consider multi-year value (Year 1: break-even, Year 2+: 100% profit to customer) 5. Pricing Optimization Strategies For Established Businesses: Run pricing experiments to optimize revenue and profit Test different price points carefully (consider elasticity) Create multiple proposal versions with different pricing Differentiate by geography or market segment Track conversion rates and customer response Key Insight: Value pricing aligns your interests with customer interests – if you’re not bringing value, you shouldn’t be in business together. Action Items for Listeners Complete the homework from Episode 1 analyze your data using marginal buyer theory Quantify the economic value your product/service creates for customers Calculate what alternative solutions would cost your customers Begin pricing experiments in your business (if appropriate for your industry) Prepare for Episode 3 Coming Up Next Hourly pricing vs. value-based pricing for services Comprehensive pricing strategy framework Putting all the pricing concepts together Key Quotes “A price is not something you set, even though yes, you do set them, it’s more of a signal of what the market is saying about the value of certain resources.” “Value pricing always aligns ourselves to the interest of the customer and the client. If we’re not bringing them value, then what the heck are we doing?” “When all of your pricing energy is going to the cost side, you’re paying less attention to the demand side.” Resources Episode 1: Pricing Theory & Marginal Buyer Concept Economist referenced: Ludwig von Mises

Key Metrics

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Pitches sent
19
From PodPitch users
Rank
#17771
Top 35.5% by pitch volume (Rank #17771 of 50,000)
Average rating
N/A
Ratings count may be unavailable
Reviews
N/A
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
N/A
Episode count
92
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
182

Public Snapshot

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Country
United States
Language
EN-US
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
N/A
Latest episode date
Thu Jan 08 2026

Audience & Outreach (Public)

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Audience range
Under 4K / month
Public band
Reply rate band
Under 2%
Public band
Response time band
3–6 days
Public band
Replies received
1–5
Public band

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Presence & Signals

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Social followers
182
Contact available
Yes
Masked on public pages
Sponsors detected
Yes
Guest format
No

Social links

No public profiles listed.

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Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
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Frequently Asked Questions About Emerge Dynamics Podcast

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What is Emerge Dynamics Podcast about?

The podcast for middle market private company managers and owners

How often does Emerge Dynamics Podcast publish new episodes?

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