15 janvier 2011

Are you charging what you are worthpar Irena O'Brien, PhD

Too often, my clients tell me that they have difficulty charging  what they believe they are worth. At the thought of billing, they experience  anxiety, guilt, etc., and for some, these emotions come up when a potential  client first calls them! In their minds, they have already jumped to the  anxiety and guilt surrounding billing. Undercharging can be manifested by an  hourly rate that is too low or by billing for less time than was actually  spent. And some even do a combination of the two. The mechanism may be  different, but the results are the same.

What are the costs of undercharging for our time?

On a practical level, when we undercharge, we earn less than we  should or work longer hours than we would like. In addition, if our fees are  too low, we create the impression that we are not that good, which can lead to  attracting less than ideal clients and less interesting work.

On an internal level, undercharging creates an emotional toll  that can lead to guilt, discouragement, unhappiness, anxiety, and  dissatisfaction with our profession. If sufficiently discouraged, it can even  lead us to abandon our profession. If we are undercharging, we create negative  thoughts and emotions that occupy valuable mind space and sap our energy.

Imagine what life would be like if we easily charged what we were  worth?

We would work fewer hours for more money. People would be more  likely to believe that we are good at what we do which would lead to more  desirable clients with more interesting questions/issues/contracts. We would  have more peace of mind, more happiness, and more satisfaction with our work.  We would have more mind space and more energy to do more.

Undercharging is often related to limiting beliefs about our self  worth. Every time that we charge less than we are worth, we experience negative  emotions (guilt, anxiety, etc.). These negative emotions create a vicious cycle  that feeds those limiting beliefs. So, accepting the negative emotions  surrounding undercharging is the first step: when we accept an emotion, we  reduce its emotional charge and stop feeding our limiting belief: we break the  vicious cycle.

To identify the hidden belief that keeps us from recognizing our  value, we can monitor and question our thoughts until the crucial belief  surfaces. Quality control the belief (beliefs don’t have to be true to be  believed):  “Is this belief really true?”  “Really?”

Then choose a new belief: “What would I like to believe about  myself?” And see how it feels as you imagine charging what you are worth. And  then charge what you are worth. And see how that feels!

Irena O'Brien, PhD Wealth Coach