Friday, May 30, 2025
Have You Ever Underpriced an Event and Regretted It?
Underpricing an event is a common challenge many catering and event food providers face at some point in their careers. It can happen for various reasons—from wanting to secure a booking, misunderstanding costs, to underestimating the complexity of the event. However, the consequences can be significant: loss of profit, burnout, compromised quality, and even damage to your business reputation.
In this blog, we will explore why underpricing happens, the risks it carries, and practical strategies to price your services accurately and confidently—so you never have to regret underpricing again.
Why Do Providers Underprice Events?
Understanding the root causes of underpricing helps you avoid repeating the same mistakes:
1. Inexperience or New Business Pressure
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Newer providers often undervalue their time and resources to attract clients.
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There’s a temptation to compete on price, especially when starting out.
2. Incomplete Cost Calculations
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Not accounting fully for ingredient costs, labor, equipment rental, travel, or venue challenges.
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Overlooking hidden or variable costs such as overtime or last-minute changes.
3. Client Pressure
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Clients requesting elaborate services but having tight budgets.
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Providers may lower prices to meet client demands rather than managing expectations.
4. Competitive Market
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In saturated markets, price wars tempt providers to undercut competitors.
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Fear of losing clients can lead to undervaluing services.
5. Poor Time Management and Event Complexity
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Failing to estimate setup time, travel time, or service duration correctly.
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Not factoring in the complexity of special dietary requests or intricate menus.
Consequences of Underpricing
Underpricing can seriously harm your business:
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Financial Loss: When costs exceed income, profits disappear, or worse, you incur losses.
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Burnout: Working long hours with insufficient pay leads to exhaustion and reduced motivation.
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Compromised Quality: Skimping on quality ingredients or staff to save costs damages your reputation.
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Client Dissatisfaction: If you are rushed or understaffed, service quality suffers.
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Difficulty Scaling: Underpricing sets low benchmarks, making it hard to raise prices later.
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Eroded Brand Value: Clients may perceive your service as “cheap” rather than high quality.
How to Avoid Underpricing and Price Your Events Right
1. Know Your True Costs
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Calculate all costs including food ingredients, staff wages, transport, equipment, and venue fees.
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Don’t forget indirect costs such as utilities, insurance, marketing, and admin time.
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Factor in a fair hourly rate for your labor and management time.
2. Use Detailed Pricing Templates
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Create a standardized pricing template that includes every element.
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Adjust prices based on the event scale, location, menu complexity, and client needs.
3. Set Clear Service Boundaries
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Define what’s included and what incurs extra charges.
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For example, travel beyond a certain distance, additional staff, or last-minute changes.
4. Communicate Value, Not Just Price
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Emphasize quality ingredients, experienced staff, customized service, and reliability.
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Help clients understand what they are paying for, reducing price objections.
5. Create Tiered Packages
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Offer multiple packages at different price points.
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This lets clients choose within their budget while you maintain profitability on higher tiers.
6. Don’t Be Afraid to Say No
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If a client’s budget is too low for the service requested, be honest.
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Recommend scaled-down options or alternative dates rather than undervaluing your work.
7. Track and Review Each Event’s Profitability
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After every event, analyze your actual costs vs. revenue.
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Learn from each to refine your pricing strategy.
What to Do If You’ve Already Underpriced
If you find yourself regretting a past underpriced event:
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Reflect on the lessons learned and adjust your future pricing accordingly.
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Consider raising prices gradually with new clients.
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Improve client communications about your value proposition.
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If possible, follow up with existing clients to explain price adjustments linked to quality and service improvements.
Conclusion
Underpricing an event can feel like a painful mistake, but it also provides valuable insights for refining your pricing strategy. By thoroughly calculating costs, communicating value, and setting clear boundaries, you can price your services confidently, protect your profitability, and build a sustainable catering business.
Pricing your services right isn’t just about covering costs — it’s about honoring your craft and ensuring clients receive the quality they deserve.
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