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Charm Pricing: The Truth Behind Price Tags (And How To Price Your Offers)

Why is everything always $9.99 instead of just $10?

Or in the online business world… $997 instead of $1000?

Spoiler alert: It’s not because those last few cents or dollars matter all that much to your bottom line. It’s because of a sales tactic called charm pricing – a psychological strategy that makes prices feel smaller than they really are.

From Target shelves to coaching programs, charm pricing is everywhere. And while it does work (more on that in a sec), many of us in the values-led entrepreneur space are starting to question it.

Because if you’re building a business rooted in justice, equity, and accessibility, you probably don’t want to rely on gimmicks or subtle manipulation to drive sales. You want to build trust with your audience – not trick them into clicking “buy now.”

In this post, we’ll explore:

  • What charm pricing is and why it works (even when folks know it’s a trick),
  • The ethical implications – especially for neurodiverse buyers and inclusive brands,
  • And how you can price your offers with both strategy and soul.

Because you can run a profitable, sustainable business without giving into sleazy sales tactics – or ending everything in 7. 

What Is Charm Pricing?

Charm pricing – sometimes called psychological pricing – is the practice of ending prices in .99, .95, or other odd numbers to make them look lower than they really are. Think:

  • $9.99 instead of $10
  • $49.95 instead of $50
  • $997 instead of $1,000

This technique is everywhere – retail stores, online courses, coaching programs, SaaS pricing… you name it. And it's not just a coincidence or personal preference. It's a deliberate sales strategy rooted in the way our brains process numbers.

Charm pricing is designed to “charm” the buyer’s brain into perceiving the price as a better deal. Even though the difference is just a few cents (or dollars), we interpret the lower-left digit as a big difference. So $9.99 doesn’t feel like “almost ten” – it feels closer to “nine.”

And yep, this trick extends beyond cents. In the world of online business, it’s common to see offers priced at $97, $197, or $997, rather than rounding up to the next hundred. This version of charm pricing has been sold as a “conversion hack” – a magic formula that supposedly boosts sales.

But just because something is common doesn’t mean it’s conscious – and that’s what we’re here to unpack.

Why Charm Pricing Works (The Psychology Behind It)

Charm pricing works because our brains are surprisingly lazy when it comes to processing numbers. (No shade – it’s just how we’re wired.)

Here’s what’s going on under the hood:

The Left-Digit Effect

Our brains read numbers from left to right, and we tend to anchor on the first digit we see. So even though $19.99 is only a penny less than $20, we interpret it as being in the nine-dollar range, not the ten-dollar one. That left digit – 1 instead of 2 – subconsciously tells us we're getting a better deal.

This same trick applies when we price something at $97 instead of $100. The drop from 3 digits to 2 makes it feel significantly cheaper – even if the difference is minimal.

The “Feels Like a Bargain” Effect

We’ve been conditioned to associate .99 or .95 endings with discounts, deals, and mass-market pricing. Think of it as a learned cue: when we see those endings, our brain goes, “Oooh, sale!”

This perception sticks even when we know better. Studies show that charm pricing can still influence purchase decisions – even among people who are fully aware of the tactic.

And What’s Up With All the 7s?

If you’ve spent any time in the online business world, you’ve probably noticed a trend: courses priced at $97, $197, $497, $997… always ending in 7.

This isn’t random – it’s a charm pricing variation that marketers have been repeating for years. Somewhere along the line, “7” got branded as the conversion sweet spot, and it caught on like wildfire.

Some believe 7 feels friendlier or luckier than 9. Others say it stands out more in a crowded market. But let’s be honest: a lot of people are just copying what they’ve seen work for others, without stopping to ask why – or whether it aligns with their brand values.

Here’s the deal: “ends in 7” pricing is still charm pricing – just with a different wrapper. It’s still designed to nudge people toward a purchase using subtle psychological influence. And if you’re committed to ethical marketing, it’s worth examining whether that subtle nudge aligns with the kind of experience you want your audience to have.

Ethical Concerns with Charm Pricing

Just because a tactic works doesn’t mean it’s right for you.

Title: 'Ethical Concerns with Charm Pricing' in gradient purple and pink text. Two price tags show '$19.99' and '$297', with the '.99' and '7' in pink. Below, five red X icons precede concerns: manipulation culture, decision fatigue, analysis paralysis, subtle gaslighting, and loss of transparency and trust. Key terms are highlighted in purple and pink.

Charm pricing is rooted in manipulating perception – which, for many mission-driven entrepreneurs, raises a big ethical red flag. And if your goal is to build relationships based on transparency, equity, and trust? It's worth taking a closer look.

Here’s where things get sticky:

It Feeds Into Manipulation Culture

Charm pricing plays directly into the psychological shortcuts our brains use to make decisions. While that might sound “clever,” it can also cross into manipulative territory – especially when used without clarity or consent.

It relies on the buyer not noticing or not thinking too hard about the actual value. And that dynamic? It’s the opposite of trauma-informed, consent-based marketing.

It Can Be Especially Problematic for Neurodivergent Buyers

Many neurodivergent folks process information differently. Tactics like charm pricing can increase decision fatigue, cause analysis paralysis, or feel like subtle gaslighting (“Wait, I thought this was $100?”).

What’s meant to be a “tiny nudge” might actually feel confusing or disorienting to someone trying to make a values-based decision.

It Undermines Transparency and Trust

When you use charm pricing, especially in the .99 or ends-in-7 formats, it can unintentionally send the message:

“I’m trying to make this price look better than it is.”

Even if your offer is incredible and totally worth it, the pricing structure itself might lead some folks to second-guess your intentions.

And for those of us building values-aligned brands, that kind of unintentional mistrust is a dealbreaker.

Can You Use Charm Pricing… Ethically?

Let’s not toss every .99 price tag into the unethical trash heap just yet.

A purple and white checkerboard background with a decorative frame. Inside, bold gradient text reads 'Ethical Marketing'. Below it, the phrase 'is about hard rules' is shown with a strikethrough. Underneath, the corrected phrase reads 'is about conscious choices', with 'conscious choices' in purple and pink.

Charm pricing isn’t inherently evil. Like many business tools, the key is intent and transparency. So before slapping $97 on your next offer because “that’s what everyone else is doing,” take a pause and ask:

Why am I pricing this way?

Are you ending in .99 or .97 because it genuinely aligns with your strategy and audience? Or are you doing it out of habit or fear – afraid that if you round up, no one will buy?

Intent matters. But so does how your audience experiences your pricing.

Would your ideal client feel respected – or misled?

Put yourself in your audience’s shoes (especially if your audience includes neurodivergent folks, trauma survivors, or people burned by pushy online sales tactics).

  • Would they feel like you’re trying to slide something past them?
  • Or would your pricing feel honest, clear, and aligned with the value you offer?

Are you being transparent about pricing and value?

Even if you do use charm pricing, you can still be upfront about why. You might say something like:

“This program is $297 – because it’s under $300 and designed to be an accessible investment for folks who want to ease into this work.”

Giving people context for your pricing builds trust and removes that sense of “Are they trying to trick me?”

Title: 'Are you pricing ethically? Ask Yourself…' in black and gradient pink-purple text. Below are three colorful speech bubbles, each with a large white question mark. Why am I pricing this way? Would your ideal client feel respected or misled? Are you being transparent about pricing and value? The background features pastel question marks and squares.

So yes – you can use charm pricing in an ethical way.

But it starts with intentionality.
Not doing what the marketing bros say “converts best.”
Not assuming your audience won’t notice.
But choosing a pricing strategy that feels right for you, and respects the people you’re here to serve.

Alternatives to Charm Pricing

If charm pricing doesn’t sit quite right with you (or your audience), you’ve got options. Ethical pricing doesn’t mean you have to guess or undercharge – it just means being intentional and transparent about your approach.

Here are some pricing alternatives that are more aligned with inclusive, values-driven marketing:

Title: 'Alternatives To Charm Pricing' in purple and pink gradient text. Below are five boxed suggestions: 'Round Pricing' with a '100' emoji, 'Value-Based Pricing' with a diamond icon, 'Tiered Pricing' with a pricing chart icon, 'Transparent Payment Plans' with a calendar and dollar sign, and 'Pay-What-You-Can or Sliding Scale' with a slider icon. The background transitions from pink to blue.

1. Round Pricing

Pricing something at $100 instead of $97 may seem like a small shift, but it can communicate big things:

  • Confidence in your offer.
  • Simplicity and ease for your buyers.
  • A departure from manipulation tactics.

Round numbers feel clean and honest. For many neurodivergent buyers, that clarity is a breath of fresh air.

2. Value-Based Pricing

Instead of pricing based on market trends or arbitrary endings, consider:

  • What is the transformation worth to your client?
  • How much time/energy/money are you helping them save or gain?
  • What feels fair and sustainable for both you and your audience?

This shifts the conversation from “what will convert” to “what feels aligned.”

3. Tiered Pricing

Offering multiple pricing tiers (like basic, standard, premium) allows you to meet people at different levels of investment without leaning on charm pricing tricks. It’s about choice and agency, not coercion.

4. Transparent Payment Plans

If you want to increase accessibility, try offering clear, no-penalty payment plans instead of dropping your price by $3 to make it “look cheaper.”

Transparency and flexibility go a lot further than psychological nudges.

5. Pay-What-You-Can or Sliding Scale (when sustainable)

For some offers – especially those serving marginalized communities – sliding scales or community-supported pricing can be powerful. It’s not the right move for every business model, but when done thoughtfully, it can embody your values and make your work more accessible. I really love the green bottle method, personally.

Text: 'your pricing is a relationship-building tool - not just a conversion lever'. The word 'pricing' is styled in a cursive purple font, while the rest is in a clean black typeface. The background features a soft, pastel rainbow gradient radiating outward.

When your pricing structure reflects your values, your clients can feel that. And that trust? It’s way more powerful than a $7 discount.

What I Do (And Why)

I’ll be honest – I didn’t always question charm pricing.

In the beginning, I did what I saw everyone else doing: almost all my offers ended in 7. $97. $297. $997. It felt like the “right” thing to do – because all the online biz “experts” swore by it. I figured, Hey, if it works for them, it should work for me too… right?

But… it always felt a little off. Like I was playing along with a strategy that didn’t quite fit.

As I dove deeper into ethical marketing and unlearned some of the default sales tactics we’ve all absorbed, I realized I didn’t want to rely on psychology hacks to make sales. I wanted my pricing to feel as intentional, inclusive, and transparent as the rest of my business.

So I made a shift.

Now, I price my offers using 0s and 5s only.
That’s why my membership is $10/month – not $9, like so many other similar programs. And my 1:1 services? You’ll see prices like $750 or $3,000, not $497 or $2997.

Does it make a huge difference in revenue? Honestly, probably not.

But it makes a big difference in how I feel about my business.
It feels cleaner. More honest. More respectful of the folks I serve.
And that is reason enough for me.

'You’re allowed to evolve' is written in a white handwritten-style text on a pink, scalloped background. Above it is a small white heart. At the bottom, is the Just Marketing logo. The background has vertical pink watercolor stripes.

If charm pricing still feels right for you, cool. If you want to try something new, go for it. If you’re not sure, test it out.

Especially if you’re neurodivergent or still figuring out what works for you, I want to normalize experimenting. Changing your mind. Tweaking things as you grow.

You don’t have to “get it perfect” from day one – you just have to stay aligned with your values and keep moving forward.

It’s Not About the Cents, It’s About the Integrity

Here’s the bottom line:
Charm pricing can work – but that doesn’t automatically make it the right choice.

The bold black text in the center reads 'It’s not about cents, it’s about integrity.’ With 'cents' highlighted in a green box and 'integrity' in a blue box. The pastel pink and purple background is overlaid with repeating white outlines of the phrase 'Ethical Pricing.'

If you’ve been ending your offers in .99 or 7 because that’s what you were taught… you’re not doing anything “wrong.” But as a values-led business owner, you have the power (and responsibility) to make conscious choices – even in the small stuff, like pricing.

This isn’t about shaming any particular number. It’s about asking:

  • Does this reflect the kind of business I want to run?
  • Is this how I want my audience to feel when they engage with my brand?

When we shift from squeezing conversions to building trust, everything changes. Pricing becomes less about psychology tricks and more about integrity, clarity, and accessibility.

So whether you round your prices, explain your pricing openly, or experiment with a new structure – let it come from a place of alignment.

Because it’s not about the cents – it’s about the connection.

Let’s Keep This Conversation Going

If this post has you rethinking your own pricing strategies – you’re not alone.

Many of us were taught to follow formulas without ever being encouraged to question them. But you can create a business that feels good, earns well, and honors your values… right down to your price tags.

And if you’re craving more support around ethical, inclusive marketing that works with your brain and your values?

  • Check out this post on the Decoy Effect
  • Or let’s connect over on LinkedIn or Instagram and keep the conversation going.

You’ve got this – and I’m cheering you on every step of the way. 

Categories: All Categories, Just Marketing®

Tags: Accessible Marketing, Ethical Marketing, Inclusive Marketing, Marketing Clarity, Marketing Confidence, Promotional Content, Values-Aligned Promotions

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About Meg Brunson

Online marketing authority and former Facebook employee Meg Brunson combines their mission to build a more accessible and inclusive world, with their expertise in the digital marketing space.

Meg is on a mission to disrupt the status quo of marketing so that financial success is the byproduct of a genuine commitment to justice, rather than an end goal in itself.

Through Meg’s signature approach, Just Marketing®, businesses are implementing ethical, inclusive, and accessible marketing campaigns that make a positive impact on society and their bottom line, creating a virtuous cycle where profitability and responsible practices reinforce each other.

Meg is a professional speaker, children’s book author, host of the Just Marketing® podcasts, CMO of BetterCEO.app and CEO of Just Marketing®.

Follow me on Instagram @theMegBrunson
Do you find yourself juggling numerous responsibil Do you find yourself juggling numerous responsibilities… leaving no time for creating content?

Finding time for content creation, planning, and repurposing can feel like an insurmountable task.

Busy schedules and competing priorities lead to inconsistent and ineffective content that fails to engage audiences or drive results.

It’s time to take content creation off the back burner and give it the prioritization that it deserves.

With the right strategy, you can take control of your time, improve your content strategy, and drive better results for your business.

That’s where the Content Marketing Membership steps in.

Instead of starting from scratch every time, you’ll have:

– A flexible monthly content calendar
– Prompts you can customize in 5–15 minutes
– Built-in ways to reuse content you already created
– A values-first system made for neurodivergent brains + busy humans

You can create consistent content without doing it all alone, and without burning out.

Learn more: ContentMarketingMembership.com 

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 #JustMarketing #EquityForAll #a11y #EquityCenteredBusiness #DiversityInMarketing #SocialJustice #RacialJustice #BeTheChange #DismantleWhiteSupremacy #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #InclusiveMarkeitng #AccessibleMarketing #MarketingAccessibility #SocialMediaMarketer #EthicalBusiness #MarketingCoach #CommunityOverCompetition #MarketingWithPurpose #MarketingWithImpact #DEI #DEIMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent  #MarketingWithADHD #adhdBusiness #adhdBusinessOwner
Community, connection, and belonging are the found Community, connection, and belonging are the foundation of trust-based business. And yet, somewhere along the way, the online business world started treating them like a product.

You've probably seen it.
(Maybe you've even done it - no judgment, I've been there too.)

The client-only Slack channel.
The "exclusive" Facebook group.
The bonus Voxer access.

All framed as perks and locked behind a purchase.

It's often taught as a "best practice." But when we pause to ask who gets left out when community is conditional... the answer matters.

– The neurodivergent entrepreneur who needs more time and trust before committing financially.
– The solopreneur who's craving connection before they're ready to invest.
– The person facing economic barriers who deeply needs support - but can't buy in right now.

When belonging has to be purchased, we're unintentionally sending the message that some people have to earn their place.

That's a pattern worth questioning... and there are ways to protect your energy and create access without burning out or giving everything away.

I wrote a blog unpacking this, including what paywalling community actually looks like, who it tends to exclude, and some genuinely doable alternatives that don't require you to be everywhere for everyone.

Read it here: MegBrunson.com/paywalling-community

Before you go: I'm curious… does your business have any free or low-barrier community touchpoints?

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#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #MarketingWithHeart #MarketingWithIntegrity #EquityCenteredBusiness #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #OnlineBusinessMarketing #OnlineMarketingTips #DEI #MarketingWithADHD #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent #a11y #ContentStrategy #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #ContentCreation
The offer itself is only half the story... You co The offer itself is only half the story...

You could have the most thoughtful, well-priced, genuinely transformative service on the market - and still lose people in the way you sell it. 

Not because they didn't want it, or it wasn't right for them… But because the experience of buying felt exhausting.

When you take the time to build offers with transparent timelines, flexible language, grace periods, and genuine integrity - you're not just being kind. You're designing an experience that actually fits the humans you're trying to reach.

That's Just Marketing®. And it's available to you right now, no overhaul required.

Read more about just offers specifically at MegBrunson.com/limited-time-offers

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"I don't like social media." I hear it often. Ma "I don't like social media."

I hear it often. 
Maybe you've said it yourself.

What I've noticed is that most people actually hate a specific experience of it. 
And we can change that experience...

Three things that have actually helped my clients shift this:

1. Reframe it as networking.

One of my clients loves meeting people face-to-face... conferences, coffee chats, local events. When I pointed out that social media is basically that same thing (building relationships, starting conversations, staying visible to people who might want to work with you), something clicked. The platform is different. The purpose is the same.

2. Pair it with something you already enjoy.

If you only ever open Instagram when you have to, your brain starts treating it like a chore. But attach it to your morning coffee, queue up a playlist, let yourself engage while you watch TV... suddenly there's a positive association baked in. You're not tricking yourself. You're just designing the experience so it doesn't feel like pulling teeth.

3. Have a clear plan before you click.

A lot of people open social media to "do marketing" and end up 45 minutes deep in someone else's drama with nothing to show for it. Know what you're there to do - respond to comments, post your content, engage with a few accounts - and then do that thing. If you're on a computer, I love recommending the Chrome extension, Newsfeed Eradicator, for this. It removes your newsfeed entirely so you can't get pulled in, but you can still access everything else.

Where does social media feel like the biggest drag for you?

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Ahh, July - the month of sunny skies and sizzling Ahh, July - the month of sunny skies and sizzling barbecues...

Whether it’s gathering with loved ones, reflecting on history, or simply soaking up summer vibes, July is packed with opportunities to honor progress and create connection.

Here are some of the standout moments to celebrate this month:

Disability Pride Month (All July) - July marks Disability Pride Month, a time to celebrate the contributions, resilience, and strength of the disability community. It’s also a moment to reflect on accessibility and inclusivity, ensuring everyone has a seat at the table - because true freedom includes everyone.

Independence Day (July 4) - For many in the U.S., July 4th is about fireworks, flag-waving, and grilled everything. But it’s also an opportunity to reflect on what freedom truly means - and who still fights for it. This year, consider celebrating not just with sparklers but with meaningful action toward justice and equity.

Nelson Mandela International Day (July 18) - This global observance honors the legacy of Nelson Mandela, reminding us all to take action and inspire change. Whether it’s through acts of service, education, or reflection, it’s a call to live out his message of equality, dignity, and peace.

Now, let’s talk marketing…

July is about freedom, connection, and celebration - so let your content reflect that! Share stories of resilience and progress, highlight the importance of accessibility, and celebrate the diversity that makes communities thrive.

The Inclusive Holiday Content Bundle is here to help you celebrate this month and every month. It’s packed with holidays and observances to keep your marketing aligned with your values and impactful for your audience.

Learn more: CelebrateOnSocial.com

Which holidays or observances will you be honoring this month?

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Slowing down your sales process might be the most Slowing down your sales process might be the most strategic thing you do this year.

It may sound counterintuitive - especially since marketing culture has spent decades telling us that speed equals success - but, when you build offers that give people room to breathe, the people who find you feel safe. 

And safe people are more likely to buy, come back for more, leave reviews, and refer friends. 

The way you structure your offers is a values statement, and your ideal clients are paying attention.

Read more about what this looks like in practice: MegBrunson.com/limited-time-offer 

Does your current marketing feel like an extension of your values? 
Or does it feel like something you borrowed from a playbook that was never built for you? 

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#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #MarketingWithHeart #MarketingWithIntegrity #EquityCenteredBusiness #SocialJustice #AlignedBusiness #BeTheChange #DismantleWhiteSupremacy #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #OnlineBusinessMarketing #EthicalBusiness #OnlineMarketingTips #DEI #ValuesMatter #MarketingWithADHD #adhdBusiness #adhdBusinessOwner #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent #a11y #ContentStrategy #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #DEIMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation
What if your next promotion felt like an invitatio What if your next promotion felt like an invitation instead of high-pressure?

You can absolutely have timelines, deadlines, and structured offers without building them on urgency and panic.

Just Marketing isn't about removing all boundaries - it's about designing those boundaries with actual humans in mind.

Here are five ways to do that:

1. Transparent timelines with context.
Tell people when your offer opens, when it closes, and why there's a time limit.

2. Grace periods.
A quiet "need a little more time? message me" signals that you see people as humans, not conversion opportunities.

3. Urgency through bonuses, not penalties.
Instead of punishing slow deciders with a higher price, reward early action with added value. Nobody gets left behind, they just get a slightly different version of the offer.

4. Gentle, human language.
"This offer is available through Friday - come back when you're ready" hits completely differently than "buy now before it’s gone." Same deadline, but a totally different vibe.

5. Re-offering with integrity.
If you plan to run the offer again, say so. Don’t pretend something is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity when it isn't.

Accessible marketing is still strategic… You're building the kind of long-term trust that actually sustains a business.

Read more: MegBrunson.com/limited-time-offer

Which of these five feels most doable for your next promotion?

ID: 'What to Offer Instead of a One-Size-Fits-All Limited Time Offer' at the top. A white panel lists five alternatives: '1. Transparent Timelines - With Context,' '2. Grace Periods,' '3. Urgency with Bonuses, Not Penalties,' '4. Gentle, Human Language,' and '5. Re-offer with Integrity.' A wallet with coins and bills is at the bottom right.

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Have you ever felt manipulated, belittled, or gasl Have you ever felt manipulated, belittled, or gaslit by someone with more power or influence?

Me too…

These aren’t just “bad vibes.”
This is what happens when systems reward authority without accountability.

At Just Marketing®, we do things differently:
~ Leadership without bullying
~ Strategy without shame
~ Boundaries and consent

Because business should never cost you your self-trust.

And you never have to tolerate abuse in the name of “professionalism,” “mentorship,” or “getting results.”

You deserve to feel safe in your work. Period.

Ever dealt with adult bullying in business spaces? 

You're not alone.

Let’s talk about what healing, justice, and safer leadership can look like… 💕

ID: A social media post by April Little: ‘Bullies don’t grow up they just grow old. When bullies go unchecked they grow up to wear suits and sit in corner…' In response to a graphic with: ‘Bullies aren’t just teenagers in high school. They are also adults in offices with nice titles who think they have the right to break the spirits of others so they can feel better about their miserable lives.’

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Limited-time offers aren't inherently wrong, but t Limited-time offers aren't inherently wrong, but the way they're typically structured can be problematic… Especially for buyers whose brains, bodies, and lives don't fit the mold that most marketing was built around.

Here are three ways the classic countdown offer quietly excludes people:

1. They assume fast processing.

Not everyone can read a sales page, weigh the decisions, regulate the emotions that come up, and pull out a credit card in 24 hours. For many neurodivergent folks, that's just not how their brain works.

2. They ignore diverse schedules.

Different time zones… Unpredictable chronic illness flare-ups… Caregiving responsibilities that don't pause for your flash sale… Real life is not optimized for tight deadlines.

3. They can trigger shame or freeze responses.

When someone wants to buy but can't move fast enough, the offer doesn't just pass them by - it can feel like a personal failure. That's definitely not the experience we want to create for people.

The goal of Just Marketing is to build structure that considers the full range of humans on the other side of the screen.

I’m sharing five values-aligned alternatives to the traditional limited-time offer at MegBrunson.com/limited-time-offer

Which of these three resonates most with your experience - as a buyer, a business owner, or both?

ID: 'Limited-Time Offers Often Miss the Mark' appears in bold purple at the top, with 'Miss the Mark' underlined. Three color-coded banners each pair an icon with a key point: a pink stopwatch: 'They assume fast processing,' a purple calendar: 'They ignore diverse schedules,' and a blue warning triangle: 'They can trigger shame or freeze responses.'

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When someone is neurodivergent, navigating executi When someone is neurodivergent, navigating executive dysfunction, or carrying past experiences with high-pressure sales tactics, urgency doesn't feel exciting - it feels threatening. 

Then the nervous system does what it does: shuts down, checks out, closes the tab.

And when your offer runs on urgency alone - you lose those values-aligned buyers. Not because they weren't interested - but because your sales experience wasn't built with them in mind.

There are other ways to structure your offers… Ones that creates momentum without manufacturing panic. 

I go through five of them on the blog: MegBrunson.com/lmited-time-offer 

What's your gut reaction when you see a countdown timer on a sales page - does it motivate you or make you want to close the tab?

ID: 'What's meant to spark action' and 'can actually spark overwhelm.' appear in purple text surrounding a red distressed stamp reading 'Limited Time Offer.' Colorful illustrated lightning bolts in pink, blue, and orange are scattered across a lavender background.

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Urgency-based promotions aren't just potentially m Urgency-based promotions aren't just potentially manipulative — they're often inaccessible by design.

They assume everyone can absorb information quickly, make fast decisions, and take action inside a narrow window. 

But that's not how a lot of brains work. And when your offer only works for fast deciders, you're quietly (and probably unintentionally) closing the door on some of the people you want to serve.

You don't have to choose between effective marketing and accessible marketing. There are ways to create offers that feel inviting instead of pressured - and they actually build more trust in the long run.

Discover the hidden accessibility barriers behind classic limited-time offers, and five inclusive alternatives you can start using right now, at: MegBrunson.com/limited-time-offer 

ID: 'Is Your Limited Time Offer Leaving People Behind?' in bold purple text with a pink outline. A silver hourglass filled with sparkling purple glitter sand sits to the right, with sand actively falling through the center. The background features a soft pink and purple watercolor wash.

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Accessibility can feel like this enormous, never-e Accessibility can feel like this enormous, never-ending audit of everything you've ever created… but let's skip the overwhelm and go straight to the doable.

Here are six relatively easy places to start:

1. Use Larger, Legible Fonts
16px minimum for body text. Skip the ultra-thin weights and decorative scripts for anything important.

2. Prioritize High Color Contrast
Run your next design through the WebAIM Contrast Checker before you post it.

3. Swap Jargon for Plain Language
Read your copy out loud. If you stumble on a phrase or find yourself mentally translating an acronym, rewrite it.

4. Add Alt Text and Image Descriptions
If the image contains information (a price, a date, a process), that information belongs in your caption or post text too.

5. Reduce Overwhelming Visuals
Less sensory chaos means more people actually absorb what you're sharing.

6. Use Descriptive CTAs
"Click here" tells people nothing. "Download the free guide," "Book your discovery call," or "Read the full post" - these tell people exactly what they're getting and where they're going... Clarity converts.

The goal here isn't a perfect, fully accessible website by Friday.

It's one intentional change this week.
Then another next week.

Progress compounds, and every shift you make opens your work up to someone who needed to find you.

For the deeper context behind each of these, go to MegBrunson.com/inaccessible-visuals

Which of these six are you tackling first?

ID: 'Make Your Offers More Visually Accessible' is at the top above a pair of illustrated eyes with lashes. Six rows each feature a checkmark: 'Use Larger, Legible Fonts,' 'Prioritize High Color Contrast,' 'Swap Jargon for Plain Language,' 'Add Alt Text and Image Descriptions,' 'Reduce Overwhelming Visuals,' and 'Use Descriptive CTAs.'

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