About Us

MD‑Konsult is an independent research firm based in Dallas. We publish deep dives on AI economics, GTM, and pricing for SaaS and SMB leaders.

Our Approach

Evidence‑backed insights for founders who care about ROI, not hype.

Outcome-Based Pricing 2026: How Enterprise B2B Companies Shift to Value Without Breaking Revenue

Outcome-Based Pricing 2026: How Enterprise B2B Companies Shift to Value Without Breaking Revenue

Outcome-Based Pricing 2026: How Enterprise B2B Companies Shift to Value Without Breaking Revenue

TL;DR / Executive Summary

Enterprise B2B companies should move toward outcome-based pricing in 2026, but they should not replace per-seat or fixed-fee models in one step because the real risk is not demand loss alone; it is revenue volatility, measurement disputes, and accounting complexity. The current consensus from firms such as McKinsey on AI-driven B2B pricing and EY on SaaS transformation with outcome-based pricing is that value-linked models are becoming the next logical monetization layer as AI changes the unit of work. That direction is correct, yet the market is understating how hard it is to define auditable outcomes, preserve recognized revenue under ASC 606 and IFRS 15, and keep margins intact during the transition. The evidence already shows the shift is real: Flexera reports 61% of companies using hybrid pricing by 2025, while Stripe’s Intercom case study shows outcome-based pricing can create an eight-figure business line when the billing logic, metric design, and trust model are well engineered. The executive implication is straightforward: leaders should treat outcome-based pricing as a staged operating-model redesign, not a packaging tweak.

  • Hybrid first, pure outcome later: the smartest transition path is a base fee plus measurable outcome layer, not an abrupt cutover from seats to outcomes.
  • The hidden constraint is revenue quality: variable consideration, attribution disputes, and weak telemetry can delay revenue recognition and distort board reporting.
  • The prize is strategic, not cosmetic: companies that price on completed work rather than access can expand wallet share, defend procurement scrutiny, and align GTM around provable value.

1. The Context

Outcome-based pricing is moving from a niche AI-agent tactic to a broader enterprise B2B monetization decision because the old pricing anchor, charging for access, is losing credibility in categories where automation changes the amount of human labor required. Flexera’s analysis of the hybrid pricing era argues that seats no longer capture actual value when workloads are driven by tokens, compute units, credits, and AI actions rather than predictable user counts. The shift is not confined to software either: RevenueML’s 2026 manufacturing pricing trends shows that pricing execution, segmentation, and tariff-adjusted logic now matter more than list-price intent, which is exactly the environment where value-linked commercial models become more attractive to buyers and sellers.

The complication is that most companies talking about outcome-based pricing are really describing three different things: usage-based billing, workflow-based billing, and true outcome-based billing. Bessemer Venture Partners’ AI pricing and monetization playbook separates these models clearly and shows the trade-off: the more tightly a charge metric aligns with customer value, the more variability the vendor absorbs in cost and delivery economics. Zendesk’s framework on outcome-based pricing adds the operational reality that the model only works if both sides agree in advance on success criteria, baselines, exclusions, verification workflows, and billing mechanics. That makes this a cross-functional business strategy problem, not a pricing-team experiment.

The resolution is not to reject the model, but to sequence it properly. EY notes that success-based variable fee arrangements may sometimes qualify for the “right to invoice” practical expedient, but only after a company carefully determines its performance obligations and confirms that invoiced amounts correspond directly with value delivered to the customer. That means boards should begin with outcome-linked pilots in tightly measurable workflows, supported by contract design, finance policy, telemetry, and auditability. The winning play is to build a hybrid bridge now, then expand toward fuller outcome pricing as the company proves measurement quality, margin discipline, and revenue recognition readiness. For broader commercial strategy context, readers can connect this move to foundational thinking in Business Model Canvas design, business model definition, and requirement prioritization with MoSCoW.

2. The Evidence

The search and market evidence says the pricing shift is real, but the transition winners are using hybrid models as a stabilizer rather than jumping directly into all-variable revenue. Flexera reports that 85% of SaaS leaders have adopted usage-based pricing and 61% of companies were already using hybrid pricing by 2025, which signals that the market has moved past the idea stage. Bessemer’s playbook reaches the same conclusion from the vendor side, arguing that hybrid models create predictability for revenue forecasting and customer budgeting while still capturing upside as outcomes scale. This is the clearest sign that the executive question is no longer whether value-linked monetization matters, but how to adopt it without damaging near-term revenue quality.

The strongest public operating example is Intercom’s evolution of Fin. Stripe’s Intercom case study shows that Intercom priced Fin at 99 cents per resolution, built an outcome-based billing system around verified successful resolutions, created annual buckets to reduce customer uncertainty, and generated an eight-figure business line in less than a year. Intercom’s later explanation of the move from resolutions to outcomes is even more revealing: once the agent began completing multi-step work that did not always end in full automation, the company had to change the metric itself because “success” was no longer binary. That is the core lesson for executives outside SaaS as well. Pricing does not merely reflect product value; it reflects how the company defines completed work. Leaders who set the wrong metric will either undercharge for delivered value or trigger commercial disputes over attribution.

Metric Value Source
Companies using hybrid pricing by 2025 61% Flexera hybrid pricing analysis
SaaS leaders adopting usage-based pricing 85% Flexera hybrid pricing analysis
High-growth SaaS median growth with hybrid models 21% median growth Flexera hybrid pricing analysis
Intercom Fin price point $0.99 per resolution Stripe case study on Intercom Fin
Intercom Fin operating scale More than 1 million resolutions per week Stripe case study on Intercom Fin
Intercom Fin customer footprint More than 7,000 teams Intercom on evolving from resolutions to outcomes
Intercom average resolution rate 67% Intercom on evolving from resolutions to outcomes

The #1 financial risk is revenue quality degradation during the transition. RightRev’s explanation of ASC 606 and IFRS 15 makes clear that revenue recognition depends on identifying performance obligations, determining transaction price, allocating that price, and recognizing revenue only when obligations are satisfied. When a price becomes contingent on an achieved outcome, the contract often becomes more dependent on variable consideration, judgment, and audit-ready evidence. EY explicitly warns that outcome-based pricing introduces added complexity because companies must determine whether variable fees can be recognized as invoiced or instead estimated and recognized over the contract term. For a CFO, this means the commercial transition can outpace the accounting model, producing apparent softness in reported revenue even when customer value is improving.

The #1 financial opportunity is that outcome-based pricing can convert pricing from a defensive procurement conversation into an expansion engine tied to provable business value. Bessemer argues that AI companies are no longer selling access but outcomes, which lets them capture more of the customer’s realized value if the charge metric is clear and trusted. Intercom’s eight-figure outcome-priced business line supports that claim in public market-facing practice, while McKinsey’s B2B pricing work reinforces a broader principle: pricing changes are powerful because even a 1% price increase can translate into an 8.7% increase in operating profits, assuming no loss of volume. Outcome-based pricing matters because it can justify that pricing power through measured work completed rather than through list-price argument alone.

3. MD-Konsult Research View

The consensus position, visible in McKinsey’s AI-driven pricing analysis, EY’s SaaS transformation guidance, and Bessemer’s AI monetization playbook, is that outcome-based pricing is becoming the superior value-capture model as AI changes how work gets done.

MD-Konsult contrarian position: The companies that win this shift will not be the ones that adopt outcome-based pricing fastest; they will be the ones that build auditable measurement and finance discipline before they let sales scale the new model.

Two data points support that view. 

  1. First, Zendesk’s implementation framework says outcome-based pricing requires a clear outcome definition, baseline, measurement period, exclusions, tracking, verification, pricing structure, contract language, and aligned finance operations. That is a full operating-system requirement, not a quoting change. 
  2. Second, Intercom’s own move from resolutions to outcomes shows that even a sophisticated operator had to evolve its metric because initial success definitions no longer matched the real work being delivered. If mature vendors have to rework the metric midstream, most enterprises are still underestimating the design burden.

The strategic implication of being early is that the company can define the market’s evidence standard before procurement and competitors do. Firms that establish trusted outcome metrics early can shape contracts, dashboards, sales playbooks, and renewal logic around their own value architecture. Firms that wait may still adopt the model later, but they will do so under customer-defined metrics that compress pricing power and increase dispute risk. For adjacent MD-Konsult reading, this logic pairs naturally with business planning, business model architecture, and business model formulation.

4. Practitioner Perspective

“The companies that get outcome-based pricing right do not start by asking sales what customers will tolerate. They start by asking finance and delivery teams which outcomes can be measured cleanly, audited consistently, and influenced enough to price with confidence. If that foundation is weak, the first wave of contracts teaches the market to distrust your model.”
— Chief Revenue Officer, enterprise software company

This practitioner view is strongly consistent with public implementation guidance. Zendesk’s article on outcome-based pricing emphasizes that outcome models fail when teams skip transparent measurement and verification. SAVI’s research on outcome-based contracts reaches the same conclusion from a services perspective: the contract succeeds or fails in the discovery phase, where deliverables, acceptance criteria, success metrics, warranty terms, and change management rules are fixed before execution begins. In other words, the market is converging on a single rule: outcome-based pricing works when ambiguity is removed early.

5. Strategic Implications by Stakeholder

Stakeholder What to Do Now Risk to Manage
CTO / CIO Build the telemetry and system-of-record layer required to prove outcomes, not just product usage. Prioritize event instrumentation, shared dashboards, audit trails, and metric governance before broad commercial rollout. Use a phased roadmap tied to the same kind of requirement prioritization logic outlined in MoSCoW prioritization. Weak instrumentation creates pricing disputes, revenue delays, and internal disagreement about whether the product actually delivered what the contract says it did.
COO / Operations Map which workflows are measurable enough for outcome pricing and which still require fixed-fee or seat-based structures. Begin with narrow, high-repeatability use cases where delivery variance is controlled and attribution is strong. If operations cannot consistently influence the outcome being sold, the business takes on variable risk without the operational levers needed to manage it.
CFO / Board Approve a hybrid transition model, establish recognition policy with auditors early, and report separately on contracted value, recognized revenue, and verified outcomes. Stress-test margin scenarios before signing large variable contracts. The core danger is not top-line decline alone; it is a mismatch between commercial momentum and reported financial performance under ASC 606 / IFRS 15, which can confuse investors and distort decision-making.

6. What the Critics Get Wrong

The strongest criticism of outcome-based pricing is that it sounds elegant in theory but becomes unstable in real enterprise settings because outcomes are hard to define, customers influence results, and vendors end up carrying too much variability. That skepticism is not irrational. Forbes/Parloa’s critique of outcome-based pricing in enterprise AI argues that the model is often oversold and can become expensive mythology when outcome attribution is weak or customer environments are too messy. That is a valid warning for boards that have only seen marketing versions of the model.

What the critics miss is that the failure mode is usually not the pricing concept itself; it is the absence of governance, metric design, and staged rollout. Intercom’s experience with outcome-based billing through Stripe shows that when the model is engineered around a concrete, billable event and then iterated rapidly, it can drive both growth and adoption. Zendesk’s implementation guidance and EY’s accounting guidance both point in the same direction: the answer is not “never use outcome pricing,” but “only use it where the outcome is measurable, attributable, and finance-ready.” That is a narrower claim than the hype cycle suggests, but it is also a much more durable one.

7. Frequently Asked Questions

What is outcome-based pricing in executive terms?

Outcome-based pricing means the customer pays for a measurable business result rather than for access, seats, or hours. Zendesk defines it as payment after a defined, measurable result is achieved, while Bessemer frames it as charging for work completed or problems solved. For executives, that makes it a monetization model tied directly to customer ROI.

How is outcome-based pricing different from usage-based pricing?

Usage-based pricing charges for consumption such as tokens, API calls, compute, or credits; outcome-based pricing charges for the successful completion of a business result. Flexera describes the market move toward usage and hybrid pricing, while Bessemer distinguishes consumption, workflow, and outcome charge metrics. The closer the pricing gets to outcomes, the clearer the customer value but the greater the execution and cost variability for the vendor.

Why are more enterprise B2B companies considering this shift in 2026?

Because AI and automation are changing the unit of work, making seat-based pricing less credible in many categories. Flexera shows that hybrid and usage-based pricing are already mainstream, and McKinsey shows pricing functions are being reshaped by AI-enabled workflows. Buyers increasingly want cost aligned with realized value rather than software access alone.

What is the biggest implementation mistake?

The biggest mistake is launching the commercial model before building measurement and finance readiness. Zendesk’s implementation sequence puts outcome definition, verification, and operational alignment ahead of scaling, and EY warns that outcome-based fees can create revenue recognition complexity. If a company cannot verify outcomes cleanly, it should not be selling them at scale.

Should companies replace per-seat pricing immediately?

No. In most enterprise B2B settings, the better answer is a hybrid model with a committed base fee plus an outcome-linked layer. Bessemer explicitly recommends hybrid models when companies need predictability with upside, and Flexera shows hybrid has become the fastest-growing model. Hybrid pricing buys time for sales, finance, and product teams to learn without destabilizing the entire revenue base.

Can outcome-based pricing work outside software?

Yes, but the conditions are stricter. SAVI shows outcome-based contracts working in services when acceptance criteria are explicit, and RevenueML shows industrial pricing increasingly depends on disciplined execution and segmentation. In manufacturing, industrial services, and outsourced operations, the model works best where output quality, speed, or cost savings can be measured clearly and attributed credibly.

8. Related MD-Konsult Reading

Share: