pricing-calculator
GitHub用于计算定价模型,包括各层级毛利率、盈亏平衡点及价格变动对收入的影响。基于明确的弹性假设提供数据支持和建议,辅助制定科学的定价策略。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills --skill pricing-calculator -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "pricing-calculator",
"description": "Model pricing scenarios — tiers, margins, break-even, and the revenue impact of a price change. Use when asked to calculate pricing, model a price increase, find break-even volume, set tier prices to a margin target, or estimate the revenue effect of a pricing change. Produces a computed pricing model (per-tier margin, break-even units, price-change revenue impact with an elasticity assumption) and a recommendation."
}
Pricing Calculator Skill
Pricing decisions are usually made on gut and defended with a spreadsheet built under deadline. This
skill does the math cleanly: the margin on each tier, the break-even volume, and the revenue impact of
a price change under an explicit elasticity assumption — so a pricing proposal rests on numbers, with
the assumptions visible. (For the strategy — model, packaging, positioning — pair with
pricing-strategy; this runs the numbers.)
Required Inputs
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided:
- The scenario — set a tier price to a margin target, find break-even, or model a price change.
- Costs — variable cost per unit/seat, and fixed costs if you want break-even.
- Current price & volume (for a price-change model).
- Elasticity assumption — expected % volume change per % price change (state it; it's the key lever and it's an estimate).
Output Format
Pricing Model: [product / scenario]
1. The numbers (via the helper):
- Per tier: price, variable cost, gross margin %, contribution per unit.
- Break-even: units (or MRR) to cover fixed costs at this price/margin.
- Price-change impact: at +X% price with an assumed Y% volume change → net revenue and margin effect, vs. status quo.
| Scenario | Price | Volume | Revenue | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Today | ||||
| Proposed |
2. The recommendation — what the math supports, and the volume drop you could absorb before the change loses money (the break-even elasticity — the most decision-useful number).
3. Assumptions — elasticity is an estimate; state it, and how sensitive the conclusion is to it.
Programmatic Helper
scripts/pricing.py (stdlib only) runs the margin / break-even / price-change math:
# in.json: {"current_price":50,"variable_cost":10,"current_volume":1000,"price_change_pct":0.2,"volume_change_pct":-0.1,"fixed_costs":20000}
python3 scripts/pricing.py in.json
python3 scripts/pricing.py in.json --json
Quality Checks
- Margins are computed on price minus variable cost, shown as % and absolute
- The elasticity assumption is stated explicitly (not hidden in the result)
- The price-change model reports the break-even volume drop you can absorb
- Break-even uses fixed costs and contribution margin correctly
- The conclusion notes how sensitive it is to the elasticity guess
Anti-Patterns
- Do not model a price rise assuming volume holds — always state an elasticity, even a conservative one
- Do not compute margin on revenue — use contribution (price − variable cost)
- Do not present one elasticity as fact — show the break-even elasticity so the reader judges the risk
- Do not ignore fixed costs in break-even — contribution must cover them before profit
- Do not confuse this with strategy — the number doesn't decide the model/packaging; pair with pricing-strategy
Based On
Pricing & break-even analysis — contribution margin, break-even volume, price-elasticity sensitivity.
Version History
- a38bc30 Current 2026-07-05 11:12


