Resources:
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Why offers win
Most services are sold as time: a block of hours, a retainer, or an open-ended “help” package. That makes clients nervous. They don’t know what they’re getting, how long it will take, or what it will cost.
Productized services are different. On the front end (what the client sees), they get a named offer, a clear outcome, specific deliverables, a set timeline, and a flat price. On the back end (your internal system), you run the same repeatable workflow every time.
This lesson is about packaging your workflow into a front-end offer clients can buy quickly, the same way they’d buy a SaaS subscription.
The anatomy of an offer
Every strong offer has five parts:
- A name — something sticky and easy to remember
- The outcome — the transformation you deliver
- The deliverables — the tangible items they receive
- The timeline — how fast they’ll get it
- The price — flat, clear, and easy to accept
Add-ons can make the offer even stronger:
- Proof — a stat, a before-and-after, or a quote
- Guarantee — a promise you can always keep
- Bonus — a checklist, template, or quick guide that makes results stick
Why naming matters
Names make your service shareable. Instead of “UX review,” say “7-Day UX Tune-Up.” Instead of “project support,” say “14-Day Team Reset.” Use plain language. Pair the outcome with the speed, and you’ll have an offer people can repeat back to you.
Make deliverables tangible
Deliverables make the outcome real. Instead of “consulting,” say:
- An audit report
- A prioritized recommendations list
- A 30-minute Loom walkthrough
Clients want to know what will land in their hands when the project ends.
Timelines sell
People value speed. SaaS delivers value instantly. Your service should do the same. Promise a timeline you can hit every single time. If it normally takes you three weeks, set the promise at three weeks. If you can reliably do it in 10 days, say so. Shorter timelines reduce hesitation.
Price the outcome, not the hours
Hourly billing keeps clients guessing. Productized services price the result. A flat price attached to a clear outcome feels safe, specific, and worth it.
Story: Sarah the project manager
Sarah, a student of ours, used to sell project management by the hour. Clients never knew what they’d get, how long it would take, or what the bill would be.
She turned her workflow into an offer called The 14-Day Team Reset.
- Front end (what clients see): a named offer, one outcome, a playbook deliverable, a 14-day timeline, and a flat $7,000 price.
- Back end (what Sarah runs internally): the same workflow steps each time, which let her serve multiple clients in parallel.
Result: Sarah now closes about six clients per month. That’s over $40,000 in revenue — not because she works more hours, but because she packaged her workflow into a clear offer.
Why clients say yes faster
Clarity sells. A name, an outcome, deliverables, a timeline, and a price remove the uncertainty. Clients can map your offer directly to their pain and feel confident saying yes.
Quick reflection
Write down these five things for your workflow:
- The name of your offer
- The outcome it delivers
- The deliverables included
- The timeline you can promise
- The flat price
If you can fill in those five blanks, you’ve packaged your workflow into an offer.

Next Lesson: We’ll talk about stacking value — how to make your offer feel even bigger without adding more work for you.