Pearson Ham Group Pearson Ham Group
  • About Us
    • About us
      • Our Approach
      • Values
      • Sustainability
      • Team
      • FAQs
    • Knowledge
      • Events
      • Insights
      • Webinars
      • Case Studies
  • How we can help
    • Commercial Excellence & Pricing Consultancy
      • Pricing Strategy
      • Pricing Review
      • Commercial Model Review
      • Pricing Organisation & Capabilities
      • Price Optimisation
      • Price Increase Campaign
      • Promotions Strategy & Optimisation
      • Discount Optimisation
      • Pricing Software Selection & Implementation
    • Market Research & Insights
      • Market Research
      • Factor Sales | Automotive
      • Insurance Insights
      • Restaurant Insights
    • Sectors
      • Consumer & Retail
        • FMCG
        • Restaurants, Food & Beverage
        • Retail
        • Travel, Tourism & Leisure
      • Financial Services & Insurance
        • Banking
        • Insurance
        • Non Banking Financial Institution
        • Retail Banking
      • Healthcare & Lifesciences
      • Industrials & Manufacturing
        • Construction
        • Logistics & Commercial services
        • Manufacturing
        • Wholesaler & Distribution
      • Private Equity
      • Business & Professional Services
        • Accounting
        • Consulting Services
        • Education & Public Sector
        • Legal
      • Technology & Media & Telecommunication
        • Media, Entertainment & Publishing
        • Software & Technology
        • Telecommunication & Utilities
  • Careers
    • Why work with us
    • Join our team
  • Contact
Close
  • English
    • Français (French)
    • Deutsch (German)
    • Español (Spanish)

The Value Realisation Playbook: How to Migrate Customers to a New Monetisation Model Without Losing Ground


Share this article:

A monetisation migration isn’t a pricing exercise, it’s a strategic transformation touching product, sales, finance, customer success, and operations.

Moving existing customers to a new monetisation model is one of the most commercially sensitive transitions companies face, and one that is often underestimated. It represents a critical “value realisation” opportunity, the final stage in an end-to-end monetisation process where the full extent of planned value must flow through to the bottom line.

While such transitions are often commercially necessary, particularly in fast‑moving SaaS and AI environments, they also create real exposure: churn risk, margin leakage, customer confusion, and internal misalignment if not managed carefully.

Within this context, migration becomes less about changing the model on paper and more about executing it with precision across product, sales, finance, customer success, and operations. It is in this “Realise” phase, where pricing integrity must be defended and customer expectations reset, that value is either captured or lost.

Done well, migration accelerates growth and strengthens customer relationships; done poorly, it undermines trust and erodes hard‑won monetisation gains.

Here’s a practical framework for de-risking the journey.

1. Re-anchor on value creation- understand who you serve and why

Before designing migration mechanics, you need clarity on the value you actually create for different customers. Most organisations start with contracts and pricing tables. The stronger starting point is the practical outcomes customers get from your products.

This means building a deeper understanding of how they use and benefit from them:

  • Where do customers derive the most value from your product today?
  • Which capabilities materially impact outcomes versus being “nice to have”?
  • How does value differ across customer types, maturity levels, and use cases

Alongside this qualitative understanding, create a commercial map of your customer base, featuring:

  • Contract structures and renewal timing
  • Usage patterns
  • Profitability by segment
  • Legacy constraints such as grandfathered pricing or bespoke agreements

This typically reveals uncomfortable truths: low-paying heavy users, highly discounted strategic accounts, or legacy cohorts that no longer reflect your target market.

Starting here reduces the risk of blunt migrations that treat all customers equally and helps focus effort where commercial exposure is highest.

2. Design migration paths – guide customers step by step

This is where many migrations become transactional. Companies announce a new model and hope customers comply.

Effective migrations focus on reducing friction by reshaping the value narrative:

  • Shift conversations from “new pricing” to “new outcomes”
  • Highlight tangible improvements: performance, functionality, support, or scalability
  • Use side-by-side comparisons to clearly articulate what’s changing and why
  • Consider pilots or transitional offers that allow customers to experience value before committing

This is also where migration paths are designed.

Avoid “big bang” transitions. Instead, create phased routes aligned to customer readiness:

  • Opt-in incentives for early adopters
  • Tiered migration options based on product version or usage maturity
  • Temporary dual models where needed
  • Clear legacy sunset timelines tied to renewal cycles

When alignment is done well, customers feel guided rather than forced.

3. Prepare the organisation – enable the migration from within

Even the best-designed migration paths fail without operational readiness behind them.

This is where many programmes quietly unravel.

By this stage, the new monetisation model may be clear – but teams on the ground often aren’t. Sales, customer success, finance, and product all experience migration differently, and misalignment shows up fast in customer conversations.

Key questions to address early:

  • Can billing and systems support dual models during the transition?
  • Are sales and success teams equipped to explain the new model confidently and consistently?
  • Do teams have clear playbooks for different customer scenarios (early adopters, objection handling, high-value customers)?
  • Are escalation paths defined for commercially sensitive situations?

Migration also exposes operational gaps: manual processes that don’t scale, unclear ownership, or inconsistent customer messaging.

Enablement matters. Teams need more than slides: they need practical guidance on how to position change, handle objections, and articulate value. Without this, migrations become reactive, account-by-account negotiations that dilute pricing integrity and slow progress.

The goal is simple: make it easy for internal teams to do the right thing, and hard to fall back into legacy behaviours.

4. Manage communication and timing – deliver structured, bespoke messaging

Customers don’t experience migration as a spreadsheet exercise. They experience it as change and change needs to be managed.

Effective migrations are built around structured communication, not ad hoc announcements.

Typically this includes:

  • Segmented messaging by customer type and maturity
  • A clear timeline: pre-notification, launch, and follow-up
  • Defined deadlines balanced with reasonable flexibility
  • Proactive outreach for high-impact accounts

One-size-fits-all communication almost always underperforms. Enterprise customers, growth-stage users, and long-tail accounts require different framing and levels of support.

Equally important is feedback. Migration programmes should actively track objections, confusion points, and adoption blockers, allowing teams to course-correct quickly.

Trust is built through transparency and consistency. It’s lost when messaging is rushed, reactive, or unclear.

A foundation for implementation

Customer migration is where monetisation strategy meets operational reality. By this point, the hard thinking should already be done.

What matters now is execution and these four steps provide a framework for success: understanding your installed base, guiding customers through structured transition paths, enabling internal teams, and communicating change with clarity.

Handled well, migration protects pricing integrity while strengthening customer relationships. Handled poorly, it undermines both.

In fast-moving SaaS and AI markets, monetisation models will keep evolving. The real differentiator won’t be redesigning pricing – it will be executing change with control.

Migration isn’t the end of monetisation. It’s where value capture actually happens.

At Pearson Ham Group, we support organisations through complex monetisation transitions – from redesigning packaging and pricing to executing customer migrations at scale. If you’re navigating a shift in your monetisation model, we’d welcome a conversation.

Related Articles

  • Packaging as a Monetisation Lever – 5 Dimensions SaaS Leaders Must Consider in the AI Era

  • Unlocking Hidden Value: A Dual Approach to SaaS Pricing Excellence

  • How Do You Monetise a Ground-breaking AI Product in LegalTech? 

Latest Posts

  • Pricing Capabilities That Drive Commercial Performance | Webinar Article

  • Pricing Capabilities That Drive Commercial Performance

  • Packaging as a Monetisation Lever – 5 Dimensions SaaS Leaders Must Consider in the AI Era

Back to top

How we can Help

Let’s pinpoint where the real value lies — together.

Ready to talk?
  • Contact
  • Events
  • Company
    • About us
    • Sustainability
  • Join our team
  • Services
    • Consultancy
    • Insights
    • Private Equity
  • Knowledge
    • Insights
    • Case Studies
  • Industries
    • Consumer & Retail
    • Financial Services & Insurance
    • Healthcare & Lifesciences
    • Industrials & Manufacturing
    • Private Equity
    • Technology, Media, Telecommunication & Utilities
    • Travel, Tourism & Leisure
  • Privacy policy

Join our mailing list

Copyright © 2026 All Rights Reserved.
We use some necessary cookies which are essential for certain basic functionalities on our website. We would also like to set Google analytics cookies to help us improve our website by collecting and reporting information on how you use it. These cookies collect information in a way that does not directly identify anyone. For more information please see our Cookies Policy.
SettingsYes, I agree
Manage consent

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
CookieDurationDescription
__cfruidsessionCloudflare sets this cookie to identify trusted web traffic.
__hssc30 minutesHubSpot sets this cookie to keep track of sessions and to determine if HubSpot should increment the session number and timestamps in the __hstc cookie.
__hssrcsessionThis cookie is set by Hubspot whenever it changes the session cookie. The __hssrc cookie set to 1 indicates that the user has restarted the browser, and if the cookie does not exist, it is assumed to be a new session.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-advertisement1 yearSet by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, this cookie is used to record the user consent for the cookies in the "Advertisement" category .
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics1 yearSet by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, this cookie is used to record the user consent for the cookies in the "Analytics" category .
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional1 yearThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary1 yearSet by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, this cookie is used to record the user consent for the cookies in the "Necessary" category .
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others1 yearSet by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, this cookie is used to store the user consent for cookies in the category "Others".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance1 yearSet by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, this cookie is used to store the user consent for cookies in the category "Performance".
CookieLawInfoConsent1 yearRecords the default button state of the corresponding category & the status of CCPA. It works only in coordination with the primary cookie.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
CookieDurationDescription
DEVICE_INFO5 months 27 daysNo description
VISITOR_PRIVACY_METADATA5 months 27 daysDescription is currently not available.
wc_session_ids[all_forms]8 minutesNo description
wc_session_ids[default]8 minutesNo description
wc_session_ids[multi][0]8 minutesNo description
wc_session_ids[multi][1]8 minutesNo description
wc_session_ids[multi][2]8 minutesNo description
wc_session_ids[multi][3]8 minutesNo description
wc_session_ids[multi][4]8 minutesNo description
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
CookieDurationDescription
_fbp3 monthsThis cookie is set by Facebook to display advertisements when either on Facebook or on a digital platform powered by Facebook advertising, after visiting the website.
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE5 months 27 daysA cookie set by YouTube to measure bandwidth that determines whether the user gets the new or old player interface.
YSCsessionYSC cookie is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos on Youtube pages.
yt-remote-connected-devicesneverYouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.
yt-remote-device-idneverYouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.
yt.innertube::nextIdneverThis cookie, set by YouTube, registers a unique ID to store data on what videos from YouTube the user has seen.
yt.innertube::requestsneverThis cookie, set by YouTube, registers a unique ID to store data on what videos from YouTube the user has seen.
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
CookieDurationDescription
__hstc5 months 27 daysHubspot set this main cookie for tracking visitors. It contains the domain, initial timestamp (first visit), last timestamp (last visit), current timestamp (this visit), and session number (increments for each subsequent session).
_ga2 yearsThe _ga cookie, installed by Google Analytics, calculates visitor, session and campaign data and also keeps track of site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookie stores information anonymously and assigns a randomly generated number to recognize unique visitors.
_ga_*1 year 1 month 4 daysGoogle Analytics sets this cookie to store and count page views.
_ga_2753777742 yearsThis cookie is installed by Google Analytics.
_ga_PH4G2W8MED2 yearsThis cookie is installed by Google Analytics.
_gat_UA-*1 minuteGoogle Analytics sets this cookie for user behaviour tracking.n
_gat_UA-18097804-11 minuteA variation of the _gat cookie set by Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager to allow website owners to track visitor behaviour and measure site performance. The pattern element in the name contains the unique identity number of the account or website it relates to.
_gid1 dayInstalled by Google Analytics, _gid cookie stores information on how visitors use a website, while also creating an analytics report of the website's performance. Some of the data that are collected include the number of visitors, their source, and the pages they visit anonymously.
CONSENT2 yearsYouTube sets this cookie via embedded youtube-videos and registers anonymous statistical data.
hubspotutk5 months 27 daysHubSpot sets this cookie to keep track of the visitors to the website. This cookie is passed to HubSpot on form submission and used when deduplicating contacts.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
CookieDurationDescription
__cf_bm30 minutesCloudflare set the cookie to support Cloudflare Bot Management.
SAVE & ACCEPT
Powered by CookieYes Logo