What Are The 5 KPIs For HVAC Duct Balancing Service Business?

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Description

KPI Metrics for HVAC Duct Balancing Service

You need to track efficiency and margin as your service mix shifts from 70% Residential to higher-margin Commercial Balancing This guide details the seven most important Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for an HVAC Duct Balancing Service Focus initially on hitting the 8-month breakeven target (August 2026) by managing your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC), which starts at $150 in 2026, and controlling operational costs like fuel and supplies, which total 18% of revenue in the first year We cover the formulas, benchmarks, and review frequency needed to maximize your $408,000 Year 1 revenue and scale efficiently into 2030


7 KPIs to Track for HVAC Duct Balancing Service


# KPI Name Metric Type Target / Benchmark Review Frequency
1 Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) Cost to acquire one new customer $150 in 2026, dropping to $125 by 2030 Monthly
2 Average Hourly Rate (AHR) Total revenue / total billable hours Exceed $125 (Residential) and trend toward $175 (Commercial) Monthly
3 Billable Utilization Rate Actual billable hours / total available technician hours Maintain 70%+ to maximize labor efficiency Weekly
4 Service Mix Percentage Revenue split between Residential and Commercial jobs Shift Commercial volume to 35% by 2030 (from 15% in 2026) Monthly
5 COGS Percentage Field Supplies/Vehicle Fuel divided by total revenue Reductoin from 180% in 2026 to 140% by 2030 Monthly
6 Months to Breakeven Time for cumulative EBITDA to turn positive Target 8 months (August 2026) Monthly
7 LTV/CAC Ratio Customer lifetime revenue versus acquisition cost Target 3:1 or higher Quarterly



How do we measure revenue quality and growth sustainability?

Revenue quality hinges on shifting the mix toward higher-paying Commercial work and ensuring your Average Service Value (ASV) keeps climbing; for a deep dive on starting this, check out How To Launch HVAC Duct Balancing Service Business? Sustainable growth means tracking these shifts monthly, not just total volume.

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Tracking Service Mix Health

  • Residential ASV sits at $650; Commercial ASV averages $2,200.
  • We need Commercial revenue to hit 40% of total volume by Q4 this year.
  • If Residential jobs increase by 20% but Commercial stays flat, quality drops defintely.
  • Monitor the month-over-month change in the blended ASV; it should rise at least 3% QoQ.
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Growth Sustainability Levers

  • Track the attachment rate for high-value Leakage Testing services.
  • If attachment is below 15%, tech training needs immediate review and adjustment.
  • Commercial service growth must outpace Residential growth by a factor of 2:1.
  • Here's the quick math: If Commercial jobs grow at 12% QoQ, that signals sustainable quality.

What is our true cost to deliver service and how do we protect margins?

Protecting margins for your HVAC Duct Balancing Service means rigorously tracking variable costs like fuel and supplies against revenue to establish an accurate Gross Margin Percentage (GM%). You must actively manage external costs such as referral commissions and payment processing fees to keep that margin healthy. Understanding these inputs is crucial, which is why you need a clear view of What Are Operating Costs For HVAC Duct Balancing Service?

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Calculate Gross Margin Percentage (GM%)

  • Calculate GM% per service line, not just company-wide.
  • Track fuel and supplies as a percentage of revenue.
  • If a $500 job has $75 in variable costs, GM% is 85%.
  • This helps you price jobs accurately; defintely know your baseline.
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Manage External Cost Leakage

  • Referral commissions erode gross profit fast if unchecked.
  • If a lead costs a 10% commission, your 85% GM drops to 75%.
  • Payment processing fees typically run 2.5% to 3.5% of the transaction.
  • Focus on direct customer acquisition to cut referral leakage.

Are our technicians utilized effectively and are we pricing correctly?

Your technicians are utilized effectively only if monthly billable hours hit 40 for residential jobs or 120 for commercial work, which validates your pricing range of $125 to $175 per hour. If you aren't hitting these utilization benchmarks, your fixed overhead isn't being absorbed, regardless of the rate you charge.

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Monitor Utilization Targets

  • Track actual billable hours per technician monthly.
  • Residential jobs forecast 40 hours utilization.
  • Commercial jobs require 120 hours utilization.
  • Low utilization signals capacity waste, defintely.
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Price To Cover Costs


How quickly do we recover customer acquisition costs and manage cash flow?

Recovering your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) within the target of 25 months is key, but you must defintely maintain a minimum cash reserve of $796k by February 2026 to weather early growth. Monitoring the ratio between CAC and Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) dictates the speed of this recovery.

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CAC Payback Timeline

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Cash Runway Management

  • Maintain a minimum cash reserve of $796k by February 2026.
  • This reserve covers operational gaps before payback is achieved.
  • Cash flow projections must account for variable service delivery costs.
  • Watch collections closely; slow payments erode your runway fast.


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Key Takeaways

  • Achieving the aggressive 8-month breakeven target hinges directly on tightly managing the initial $150 Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and controlling operational expenses.
  • Profitability and long-term growth are secured by strategically increasing the share of high-margin Commercial Balancing services from 15% to 35% by 2030.
  • Maximizing technician efficiency through a high Billable Utilization Rate (targeting 70%+) is crucial, as labor is the primary driver of service delivery costs.
  • Success requires rigorous, frequent KPI monitoring, including weekly reviews of Gross Margin and monthly tracking of the LTV/CAC ratio to ensure sustainable scaling.


KPI 1 : Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)


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Definition

Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) tells you exactly what it costs, in marketing dollars, to sign up one new paying client. This metric is vital because if CAC is too high, you'll never make money, no matter how good the service is. We need to keep this number lean to ensure long-term health.


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Advantages

  • Shows how efficient your marketing spend is right now.
  • Helps decide which acquisition channels deserve more budget.
  • Crucial input for hitting the LTV/CAC Ratio target of 3:1.
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Disadvantages

  • Ignores the total value a customer brings over their lifespan.
  • Can push teams to chase cheap, low-value customers only.
  • Doesn't capture the time lag between spending and booking the first job.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized technical services like duct balancing, CAC varies widely based on whether you target residential homeowners or commercial property managers. Your internal goal is aggressive: aim for $150 per customer by 2026, dropping further to $125 by 2030. Hitting these targets means your marketing is highly focused on high-intent leads.

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How To Improve

  • Double down on channels delivering customers with the best LTV/CAC ratio.
  • Improve website conversion rates to turn more leads into booked jobs.
  • Systematize referrals from happy homeowners to drive down acquisition spend.

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How To Calculate

CAC is simple division. You take everything you spent on marketing over a period and divide it by how many new customers that spending brought in. It's a direct measure of marketing efficiency.

CAC = Annual Marketing Budget / New Customers Acquired


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Example of Calculation

If you spend $15,000 on marketing efforts in a quarter, and those efforts result in 100 brand new customers signing up for their first balancing service, your CAC is calculated below. This is the metric you must review monthly.

$15,000 / 100 Customers = $150 CAC

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Tips and Trics

  • Review this number monthly, not quarterly, to catch spending spikes fast.
  • Segment CAC by customer type: Residential vs. Commercial jobs.
  • Only include direct marketing spend; don't mix in operational overhead.
  • If CAC rises above $150, you need to defintely check conversion rates immediately.

KPI 2 : Average Hourly Rate (AHR)


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Definition

Average Hourly Rate (AHR) is what you actually earn for every hour a technician spends working on a paying job. It tells you if your pricing structure is working against your actual delivery costs. For this specialized HVAC duct balancing service, AHR is the primary indicator of pricing health and revenue quality.


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Advantages

  • Shows if you are charging enough for specialized labor.
  • Directly measures the financial impact of your service mix.
  • Helps isolate pricing problems from utilization problems.
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Disadvantages

  • Can hide low efficiency if technicians pad billable hours.
  • Ignores the cost of non-billable time like travel or admin.
  • A high AHR might result from over-servicing a single client.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized technical services like air balancing, your AHR must reflect the value of solving comfort issues and saving energy. Your baseline target for residential jobs must exceed $125 per billable hour. As you successfully shift volume toward commercial clients, the target AHR should trend up toward $175.

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How To Improve

  • Implement strict time tracking to prevent hour inflation on invoices.
  • Actively pursue commercial contracts to increase the average rate realized.
  • Review the residential rate quarterly if the $125 target isn't met.

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How To Calculate

You calculate AHR by taking all the money earned from services in a period and dividing it by the total hours logged against those services. This calculation must exclude non-billable time like training or setup.

AHR = Total Revenue / Total Billable Hours


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Example of Calculation

Say in June, you billed 500 hours across all jobs and collected $70,000 in service revenue. Here's the quick math to see where you stand against your targets.

AHR = $70,000 / 500 Hours = $140.00

This result of $140 is healthy, exceeding the residential floor of $125, but it suggests you are still heavily weighted toward residential work or need to push commercial rates higher.


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Tips and Trics

  • Segment AHR reporting by technician to spot training needs.
  • If your Service Mix Percentage shows too much residential work, raise rates.
  • Review AHR monthly; if it dips below $125, pause marketing spend.
  • Track the ratio of residential hours to commercial hours defintely.

KPI 3 : Billable Utilization Rate


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Definition

Billable Utilization Rate measures how much of your technicians' paid time actually generates revenue. It divides the hours spent actively balancing HVAC ducts by the total hours they were available to work. You want this number high, definitely above 70%, because every hour below that target is pure overhead cost walking around. It's the core metric for labor efficiency in a service business like yours.


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Advantages

  • Shows exactly where paid labor time is lost.
  • Directly links scheduling density to gross margin.
  • Helps justify hiring decisions or overtime needs.
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Disadvantages

  • Can hide necessary non-billable work like site prep.
  • Pressuring techs for 100% utilization causes burnout.
  • A high rate with a low Average Hourly Rate is still bad.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized technical field services, you should target utilization above 70%. If your service mix is heavy on residential jobs (billed at $125/hr), you might see dips due to longer travel between stops. Commercial work, billed higher at $175/hr, usually allows for better density, pushing utilization closer to 75%. If you're consistently under 65%, you're paying technicians to wait.

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How To Improve

  • Review utilization weekly, not monthly, for quick fixes.
  • Geographically cluster service calls to cut drive time waste.
  • Mandate that all non-billable time (e.g., 30 mins for paperwork) is logged separately.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this by dividing the total hours your technicians spent actively balancing ducts by the total hours they were scheduled to be working. This tells you the percentage of paid time that directly contributed to revenue generation.

(Total Billable Hours / Total Available Technician Hours) x 100


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Example of Calculation

Say you have one technician working a standard 40-hour week. If that technician spent 32 hours on site performing the balancing adjustments and 8 hours traveling or waiting for access, their available time is 40 hours. We plug those numbers in to see the efficiency.

(32 Billable Hours / 40 Available Hours) x 100 = 80% Utilization Rate

An 80% rate is excellent for a service business, showing strong scheduling discipline.


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Tips and Trics

  • Track drive time as a separate non-billable bucket.
  • Set individual technician targets, not just the team average.
  • If utilization dips, check if the Average Hourly Rate is too low.
  • Ensure your scheduling system logs time accurately down to the minute.

KPI 4 : Service Mix Percentage


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Definition

Service Mix Percentage shows where your revenue actually comes from. It tracks the split between your Residential jobs and your Commercial jobs. This number is critical because Commercial work commands a higher Average Hourly Rate (AHR) than Residential work.


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Advantages

  • Ensures you hit the target AHR by shifting toward Commercial rates.
  • Shows progress toward the 35% Commercial volume goal by 2030.
  • Helps manage risk by not relying too heavily on one segment.
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Disadvantages

  • Revenue split alone doesn't show job profitability or efficiency.
  • A high Residential mix (like 70%) might mask low utilization rates.
  • It can distract from controlling Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC).

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized technical services, a heavy initial mix skewed toward Residential (your 70% target for 2026) usually means lower average transaction values. Commercial contracts, often involving facility managers, typically support higher rates, which is why the target AHR for Commercial is $175 versus Residential's $125.

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How To Improve

  • Create a dedicated sales pitch for property management firms.
  • Incentivize technicians to upsell Commercial clients on maintenance plans.
  • Review pricing tiers monthly to ensure Residential jobs meet the $125 AHR floor.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this by dividing the revenue generated by a specific segment by your total revenue for the period. This is a straightforward percentage calculation.

Service Mix Percentage = (Revenue from Segment / Total Revenue) x 100


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Example of Calculation

Say you are reviewing your performance for the end of 2026. If your total revenue was $100,000, and Residential jobs accounted for $70,000 of that, your Residential mix is 70%. If Commercial was $15,000, that's 15%.

Residential Mix = ($70,000 / $100,000) x 100 = 70%

If you see the Commercial portion is lagging the 15% target, you know exactly where to focus sales efforts next month.


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Tips and Trics

  • Review the mix monthly to catch deviations early.
  • If Commercial is below 15% in 2026, sales needs a course correction.
  • Track the volume shift toward the 35% Commercial target by 2030.
  • Defintely map the AHR impact when a job shifts from Residential to Commercial.

KPI 5 : COGS Percentage


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Definition

Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) Percentage shows how much revenue you spend directly delivering the service. For this HVAC balancing business, COGS includes field supplies and vehicle fuel. A target starting at 180% in 2026 means costs are 1.8 times revenue, which isn't viable long-term; the goal is efficiency to bring this down to 140% by 2030.


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Advantages

  • Shows direct operational efficiency related to service delivery.
  • Highlights the financial impact of achieving scale on variable costs.
  • Guides necessary adjustments to your hourly pricing structure.
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Disadvantages

  • It hides labor efficiency if technician wages aren't included in COGS.
  • A low percentage might mean you are skimping on necessary field supplies.
  • It ignores fixed overhead costs like office rent or management salaries.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized technical services, a healthy COGS Percentage is often under 50%. Seeing an initial projection of 180% signals massive immediate operational risk, likely due to high initial fuel costs or inefficient routing before scale kicks in. Benchmarks help you see if your cost structure is competitive or if you need radical process changes fast.

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How To Improve

  • Optimize technician routing software to cut vehicle fuel consumption.
  • Negotiate bulk pricing for calibration tools and field supplies.
  • Increase job density by scheduling more jobs per service day.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this by dividing your total direct costs-fuel and supplies-by the total money you brought in from services. This metric must be tracked monthly to ensure you are hitting the efficiency targets set for 2030.

COGS Percentage = (Total Field Supplies + Total Vehicle Fuel) / Total Revenue


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Example of Calculation

If your initial 2026 projections show $180,000 spent on fuel and supplies against $100,000 in revenue, your COGS Percentage is unsustainable. By 2030, if revenue grows to $500,000 and optimized costs land at $700,000, the percentage drops significantly.

2026 Example: ($180,000 COGS / $100,000 Revenue) = 180%
2030 Target: ($700,000 COGS / $500,000 Revenue) = 140%

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Tips and Trics

  • Track fuel cost per technician per week, not just monthly totals.
  • Tie supply usage directly to the type of job completed.
  • If utilization is low, COGS percentage will naturally look worse.
  • Review this metric defintely at your monthly leadership meeting.

KPI 6 : Months to Breakeven


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Definition

Months to Breakeven tells you how long it takes for the business's total profits to finally pay back all the m oney it lost getting started. It measures the point where your cumulative Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA) flips from negative to positive. For this specialized duct balancing service, the financial plan targets achieving this milestone in exactly 8 months, landing in August 2026, and we check that progress every month.


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Advantages

  • It sets a hard deadline for achieving operational self-sufficiency.
  • It forces management to prioritize high-margin work immediately.
  • It directly informs the required cash runway for investors.
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Disadvantages

  • It relies heavily on projections for future revenue growth rates.
  • It ignores the actual cash balance when the target is hit.
  • A long timeline can signal poor unit economics that need fixing now.

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Industry Benchmarks

For service businesses requiring specialized tools and technician training, a breakeven period between 6 and 12 months is typical, assuming moderate startup costs. If you are aiming for 8 months, you must ensure your initial Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) stays near the $150 target and that technicians are billing efficiently from day one. Any delay in hitting the 70%+ Billable Utilization Rate will push this date out.

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How To Improve

  • Drive the Average Hourly Rate (AHR) up by prioritizing commercial jobs.
  • Immediately reduce the initial COGS Percentage from 180% through route density.
  • Ensure technician schedules maintain utilization above 70% every week.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this by summing the net profit or loss (EBITDA) generated each month, starting from launch, until that running total equals zero or more. This is different from simple monthly profitability because it accounts for the initial investment losses carried forward.

Months to Breakeven = The first month 'T' where $\sum_{t=1}^{T} (\text{Monthly EBITDA}_t) \geq 0$

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Example of Calculation

If the business launches in January 2026 and projects an average monthly loss of $10,000 for the first seven months due to ramp-up costs, but the efficiency gains push the eighth month (August 2026) EBITDA to a profit of $15,000, we check the cumulative total. The cumulative loss going into month 8 is $70,000. We need the profit in month 8 to be greater than $70,000 to hit breakeven in that month, but the model targets August 2026, meaning the cumulative losses up to July are overcome by August's results.

Cumulative EBITDA (End of Month 7) = 7 months (-$10,000/month) = -$70,000. If Month 8 EBITDA is $+$80,000$, then Cumulative EBITDA (End of Month 8) = $-$70,000 + $80,000 = +$10,000$. Breakeven is achieved in Month 8.

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Tips and Trics

  • Track the cumulative EBITDA monthly to spot deviations from the 8-month target early.
  • If Service Mix Percentage favors residential too heavily, breakeven will slip.
  • Ensure your initial CAC spend is fully recognized as a loss in the first month's EBITDA calculation.
  • If utilization dips below 65% for two consecutive weeks, you defintely need to adjust scheduling immediately.

KPI 7 : LTV/CAC Ratio


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Definition

The LTV/CAC Ratio measures how much total revenue a customer generates across their lifespan compared to the cost of acquiring them. This ratio is your primary indicator of marketing efficiency and long-term business health. A high ratio confirms that your customer acquisition strategy is profitable and scalable.


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Advantages

  • It validates marketing spend by linking acquisition cost directly to lifetime profitability.
  • It helps you decide how aggressively you can spend to capture market share.
  • It forces you to focus on retention, as increasing Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) directly improves the ratio.
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Disadvantages

  • LTV calculations often rely on assumptions about future customer behavior, which can be wrong.
  • It can hide poor unit economics if you only look at gross revenue instead of contribution margin.
  • If you only track the blended ratio, you might miss that one customer segment (like Commercial) is highly profitable while another loses money.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized technical services, a ratio below 2:1 means you are losing money on every new customer you bring in. The goal here is to hit 3:1 or higher, which signals a strong, sustainable model. If you are still in heavy growth mode, anything above 2.5:1 is acceptable, but you must have a clear plan to reach 3:1 within 12 months.

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How To Improve

  • Aggressively reduce Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC), aiming for the $150 target set for 2026.
  • Increase the frequency of service calls or offer maintenance contracts to boost LTV.
  • Shift marketing focus toward the Commercial segment, which typically yields higher Average Hourly Rates (AHR).

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How To Calculate

You calculate this ratio by dividing the average revenue expected from a customer over their relationship by the total cost incurred to acquire them. You must review this ratio quarterly to ensure acquisition spending remains disciplined.

LTV / CAC

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Example of Calculation

Say your projected LTV for a typical residential customer is $450 based on their average service frequency and spend. If your current CAC is $150, the calculation shows your ratio. If you hit the 2026 CAC target of $150, you achieve the desired 3:1 ratio, meaning every dollar spent on marketing returns three dollars over time.

$450 (LTV) / $150 (CAC) = 3.0

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Tips and Trics

  • Calculate LTV using contribution margin, not just gross revenue, for accuracy.
  • Track CAC by channel; don't rely on the blended average if channels perform differently.
  • If the ratio dips below 2.5:1, immediately audit marketing spend effectiveness.
  • Review this defintely every quarter, aligning it with your Billable Utilization Rate checks.


Frequently Asked Questions

Achieve the 8-month breakeven date (August 2026) by tightly controlling the initial $150 CAC and managing the $4,600 monthly fixed overhead