Spreadsheets Should Not Dictate the Value of Your AV Work During the Pandemic

This is the right time for integrators to think differently about pricing and proposals now that customer expectations have changed.
Published: October 27, 2020

Just aboutย everything is differentย in the business world than it was nine months agoโ€”and that means AV integration pros are doing things theyโ€™ve never done before for their customers and they probably arenโ€™t quite sure how much to charge for these new types of work.

After years and decades of handing potential customers a proposal thatโ€™s based off an internal spreadsheet focused on what it costs for materials and labor, itโ€™s time toย completely ditch that modelย in an era when service is the primary commodity youโ€™re offering, says business consultant Tom Stimson.

โ€œA lot of us donโ€™t know how to price things that donโ€™t have line items attached to them,โ€ said Stimson in the latest installment of his Intentional Success webinar series.

โ€œIf we present it to the customer the way we think about it, no wonder we scare them. A lot of things that are included in the job canโ€™t be part of the quote and you need to be able to justify the math,โ€ he said.

Stimson compared the new pricing model to a trip to the mechanic, noting mechanics have rack rates for known problems and also factor in add-on services including diagnostic tests when quoting how much itโ€™ll cost to fix that โ€œsoundโ€ youโ€™ve been hearing that you just canโ€™t locate.

โ€œ(In the old pricing model), youโ€™re not solving the problem,โ€ said Stimson. โ€œYouโ€™re just telling them what it costs for the tools you need to fix it. That needs to change so the customer knows youโ€™re fixing their problem and they arenโ€™t thinking as much about the price.

โ€œLearning how to manage scope creep and learning on the job will help. How long it will take you to do the job is not the customerโ€™s problem. Your job in pricing is to eliminate as many unneeded variables as possible,โ€ he said.

โ€œHow you arrived at your price is your secret sauce,โ€ said Stimson. โ€œHow you present it to your customer is your superpower.โ€

Putting Together the Perfect Proposal

To put together the perfect proposal in this era, start with the scope, move on to the elements youโ€™ll need to achieve the ultimate goal of client satisfaction, determine what itโ€™ll cost you to deliver those elements, figure out the price you should charge for that to bring you a profit and press โ€œsend.โ€

Scope should consider what youโ€™ll deliver to the customer, what is assumed by both sides, what the customer is responsible for and what the customer gets to keep at the end of the process.

โ€œYou have to define what โ€˜finishedโ€™ looks like,โ€ said Stimson. โ€œYour enemy in all of this is unnecessary customization. The more you can define, the better.โ€

AV integration pros and live events pros should build a price book, capture supplier quotes for future reference, ask for three variations from content and media creators and price based on actual replacement cost rather than the cheapest option. Those steps will lead to more profitable proposals, said Stimson.

โ€œYour proposal reflects the work you are going to do,โ€ he said. โ€œDonโ€™t let a spreadsheet define you. Sell the end result, not the plan.โ€


This article originally appeared on our sister publication Commercial Integrator‘s website.

Strategy & Planning Series
Strategy & Planning Series
Strategy & Planning Series
Strategy & Planning Series
Strategy & Planning Series
Strategy & Planning Series
Strategy & Planning Series