How Much Project Management Consulting Owners Make: $150K Plan

Project Management Consulting Owner Makes
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Description

A project management consulting owner can plan for $150,000 in salary in this model, but the firm does not yet support profit distributions First-year revenue is about $116,700, while payroll alone is $297,500, so sustainable owner take-home from profit is $0 unless the gap is funded or costs change By Year 5, revenue reaches about $898,600, but payroll rises to $835,000, keeping net profit negative before reserves



Owner income iconOwner income$150k salary, $0 draw
Net margin iconNet margin-274% to -27%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$116.7k-$898.6k
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyHard

Want to test your owner pay target?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.

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Planning note: Research-based planning estimate only. Actual owner income depends on revenue, margins, payroll, taxes, debt, reserves, and timing. This is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.



Want to check owner income in the model?

The dashboard in the Project Management Consulting Financial Model Template shows revenue, gross margin, payroll, fixed costs, EBITDA, and owner take-home assumptions—open it now.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Owner salary: $150,000
  • Distributions: not supported
  • Revenue: $116.7k to $898.6k
  • Payroll: $297.5k to $835k
Project Management Consulting Financial Model dashboard summarizes key KPIs, runway and cash position with a dynamic dashboard, helping spot cash-flow blind spots and present investor-ready metrics.

Can a project management consulting business scale?


Yes—Project Management Consulting can scale, but it stops behaving like a solo practice once headcount grows. In this model, revenue rises from about $116,700 in Year 1 to about $898,600 in Year 5, while payroll climbs from about $297,500 to $835,000. That means owner income depends on consultant utilization (billable time), pricing discipline, recruiting quality, and bench control.

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Revenue can grow

  • $116,700 in Year 1
  • $898,600 in Year 5
  • Growth comes from more clients
  • Retainers and rates also rise
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Scaling adds risk

  • Payroll rises to $835,000
  • Management time gets tight
  • Quality control becomes harder
  • Cash timing starts to matter

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What drives owner income

  • Keep consultants billable
  • Hold pricing firm
  • Hire well, not fast
  • Manage bench costs
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What scalable firms need

  • Strong project controls
  • Clear client reporting
  • Reliable recruiting
  • Enough cash for growth

How much can a solo project management consultant make?


A solo Project Management Consulting owner can produce about $116,700 in Year 1 revenue from about 208 acquired clients, or roughly $561 per client, but that does not support a $150,000 owner salary after overhead, marketing, software, travel, and reserves; for the key operating driver, see What Is The Most Critical Success Factor For Your Project Management Consulting Business?.

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Income math

  • Year 1 revenue: $116,700
  • Acquired clients: about 208
  • Average revenue: about $561/client
  • Owner salary: $150,000 unsupported
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Pay levers

  • Project consulting: $175/hour
  • Retainers: $160/hour
  • Audits: $185/hour
  • Unpaid sales time cuts take-home

How do project management consulting profit margins affect take-home?


If you’re pricing Project Management Consulting, start with How Much Does It Cost To Open, Start, Launch Your Project Management Consulting Business? because margin is the gatekeeper for owner take-home. In Year 1, delivery costs include 15% contractor fees, 3% specialized software, 8% project marketing, and 2% client travel, plus $81,000 in fixed overhead before payroll. Add $297,500 of Year 1 payroll and the model stays negative, so the owner is capped at funded salary, not profit distributions.

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Year 1 cash squeeze

  • 15% goes to contractors.
  • 3% goes to software.
  • 8% goes to marketing.
  • 2% goes to client travel.
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Owner pay rule

  • $81,000 fixed overhead comes first.
  • $297,500 payroll hits in Year 1.
  • $835,000 payroll hits by Year 5.
  • New consultants must fund salary, bench time, supervision.



Which drivers move owner take-home most?

1

Billing Rate

$160-$185

Year 1 rates run $160-$185 an hour, so even small price lifts drop straight to owner income.

2

Utilization

8-40 hrs

Work is sold in 8-40 billable hours per engagement, so more chargeable time spreads salary and rent over more revenue.

3

Client Mix

20%-60%

The mix shifts toward retainers, which makes revenue more repeatable and gives the owner steadier draws.

4

Delivery Leverage

15%-7%

Contractor fees start at 15% and fall to 7%, so tighter delivery reuse keeps more gross margin in-house.

5

Overhead Control

$231K

Fixed overhead is about $81K a year, and a $150K owner salary means revenue growth alone will not create distributions if payroll rises faster than margin.

6

Cash Buffer

$830K

Minimum cash bottoms at about $830K in Month 2, so early profits need to stay in reserve instead of being paid out.


Project Management Consulting Core Six Income Drivers



Billing Rate And Pricing Model


Billing Rate and Pricing

Income here comes from rate per billable hour and how you package the work. In Year 1, source rates start at $175 for project consulting, $160 for retainers, and $185 for health check audits. By Year 5, those rise to $195, $180, and $205. Higher rates lift owner income only if clients see clear risk reduction or faster delivery.

Retainers can smooth cash flow, but they do not fix weak pricing on their own. The real test is realized revenue per hour after prep, calls, and rework. If the buyer sees the work as generic project support, rate pressure rises and take-home pay falls. One clean rule: price proof, not effort.

Track Realized Rate, Not Sticker Rate

Measure stated rate, discounts, billable hours, and mix by offer. The key inputs are project consulting, retainer work, and audit work, plus the hours each one consumes. If onboarding, client meetings, and revisions expand, the realized hourly rate drops even when the posted rate holds.

  • Track hours spent before billing
  • Test pricing by client segment
  • Quote risk reduction in dollars
  • Package audits with clear outputs

Push higher rates only when the offer is tied to a faster delivery date, fewer project delays, or cleaner risk control. Retainers help cash flow, but the owner’s pay still depends on keeping scope tight and keeping the mix toward higher-value advisory and audit work.

1

Utilization And Billable Capacity


Utilization And Billable Capacity

Utilization is the share of working time billed to clients. In Year 1, the model uses 40 project consulting hours, 15 retainer hours, and 8 audit hours per engagement, so owner income depends on how much of the week stays billable versus sales, proposals, hiring, admin, and delivery management.

Unbilled time is the leak. If onboarding, client meetings, or proposal work grow, effective hourly earnings fall even when the posted rate looks strong. That reduces cash available for owner pay because the same fixed overhead and labor costs are spread over fewer paid hours.

Protect Billable Hours

Track billed hours ÷ total working hours every week, not just at month end. Split time into consulting, retainer, audit, and non-billable work so you can see where income gets lost. If one service line keeps pulling in unpaid prep or meetings, the rate needs to cover that drag.

The clean rule is simple: every unpaid hour must be paid for by billed hours. Cap proposal time, tighten onboarding, and use standard scopes for repeat work. If the billed mix shifts toward lighter retainers or longer client meetings, raise the minimum hour package or owner pay will slip.

  • Measure billable share weekly.
  • Separate paid and unpaid work.
  • Watch onboarding time by client.
  • Set scope limits for meetings.
2


Client Mix And Contract Value


Client Mix And Contract Value

When Year 1 revenue is split across 70% project consulting, 20% retainer services, and 15% health check audits, income is more exposed to project timing than it first looks because the mix can overlap across the same client. Bigger projects and repeat advisory work help fill sales gaps, but one paused contract can cut cash flow and delay owner pay fast.

By Year 5, retainers rise to 60%, which should make monthly revenue steadier and margins easier to plan. The tradeoff is concentration: if a few large clients drive most billings, a slow renewal or late collection can hit profit even when booked revenue still looks strong.

Track Mix, Renewal, And Client Concentration

Track revenue by contract type, average contract value, renewal rate, and the share from the top 3 clients. Also watch days sales outstanding (DSO, the average days to collect cash), because long collection cycles weaken take-home income even when sales are solid.

Push for retainers that cover ongoing advisory time, reporting, and delivery oversight. If a client adds work without recurring margin, it lowers owner income. A simple test: if one account can pause and create a cash hole, the mix is too concentrated.

3


Delivery Leverage Through Consultants


Consultant Delivery Leverage

Delivery leverage means using contractors and employees to serve more client work than the owner can handle alone. It can raise revenue, but only if billable hours stay high enough to cover 15% of revenue in Year 1 for contractor and freelancer fees, then 7% by Year 5, plus the cost of managing the team.

The owner’s take-home drops when bench time rises. Employee payroll climbs from $297,500 to $835,000 over the forecast, so unused capacity still burns cash even when sales are growing.

Track Utilization Weekly

Measure billable utilization as paid client hours divided by available hours. Track contractor fees, payroll, recruiting time, supervision time, and rework, because those inputs decide whether delivery growth becomes profit or just more activity.

  • Set a minimum billable hour target.
  • Review bench time every week.
  • Price for supervision load.
  • Cut low-margin staff mix fast.

One clean rule: if added headcount does not lift billable hours fast enough, it lowers owner draw. Delivery leverage only helps when the team is fully used and the client mix can absorb the extra payroll.

4


Operating Expense Discipline


Lean Overhead Discipline

Fixed costs start at $6,750 per month or $81,000 per year, before any project work is delivered. That covers rent, utilities, software, legal, accounting, insurance, supplies, and conferences, so every extra dollar of overhead has to be paid by billable revenue or it comes straight out of owner take-home.

Year 1 marketing adds $25,000, project-specific marketing and sales add 8% of revenue, and the budget can rise to $100,000. Heavy tools, travel, admin support, and professional services only help if they create measurable client revenue; otherwise they cut net profit and delay any profit draw.

Track Overhead Per Billable Dollar

Watch fixed costs as a monthly run rate, then add marketing, sales, travel, and outside help as a share of revenue. Here’s the quick test: if a cost does not protect delivery, improve close rate, or lift project value, it should be cut or capped. One clean rule: overhead should stay light enough that owner pay is not forced to fund gaps.

Build the forecast from revenue, marketing spend, and non-delivery costs, then review them each month. If the marketing budget moves from $25,000 toward $100,000, or if travel and admin grow faster than booked work, the owner’s income gets squeezed even when sales look healthy on paper.

  • Track overhead as % of revenue.
  • Approve spend only with client proof.
  • Cap fixed costs at the plan.
5


Reserves And Reinvestment Policy


Reserves Before Owner Pay

Accounting profit is not spendable cash until client collections clear and reserves are set. In this model, operating profit is negative after payroll, overhead, marketing, delivery costs, and travel, so there is no supported profit distribution for the owner.

One clean rule: if cash in does not cover cash out, owner pay is a funding decision, not a profit decision. If the owner takes the planned $150,000 salary while losses continue, the gap must come from cash on hand, outside capital, or cost cuts.

Set Cash Reserves First

Track collections timing, monthly burn, tax needs, and planned growth spend before you set any draw. Reserves should cover slow client payments, sales gaps, bench time, taxes, and reinvestment so the business can keep paying consultants and vendors on time.

Measure reserve use against the cash forecast, not the income statement. If payroll, overhead, and delivery costs stay above billings, reduce owner pay, delay hiring, or trim travel and marketing until cash turns positive. Cash discipline protects income better than paper profit.

6



Compare lean, base, and mature-year income scenarios

Owner income scenarios

Owner income stays tight because payroll, fixed overhead, and delivery costs absorb revenue fast. The step-up from lean to mature scales the business, but it still does not free up distributions.

Low, base, and high cases show when this consulting model can pay the owner.
Scenario Low CaseLow Case Base CaseBase Case High CaseHigh Case
Launch model This is the lean case, where first-year revenue stays modest and owner income remains salary-only. This is the base case, where Year 3 scale improves revenue but still does not support owner distributions after reserves. This is the stronger case, where Year 5 revenue is higher but reserves still block owner distributions.
Typical setup Year 1 is about $116,700 revenue, $297,500 payroll, $81,000 fixed overhead, 28% delivery plus variable costs, and a $25,000 marketing budget, so margin stays negative. Year 3 is about $402,400 revenue, $650,000 payroll, $81,000 fixed overhead, and 195% delivery plus variable costs, so the model still runs negative. Year 5 is about $898,600 revenue, $835,000 payroll, $81,000 fixed overhead, and 135% delivery plus variable costs, so distributions still stay at zero.
Cost drivers
  • Low revenue
  • $25,000 marketing budget
  • $297,500 payroll
  • $81,000 fixed overhead
  • 28% delivery plus variable costs
  • Year 3 revenue scale
  • $650,000 payroll
  • $81,000 fixed overhead
  • 195% delivery plus variable costs
  • Year 5 revenue scale
  • $835,000 payroll
  • $81,000 fixed overhead
  • 135% delivery plus variable costs
  • reserves absorb cash
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves $0 distributionsNo distributions $0 distributionsNo distributions $0 distributionsNo distributions
Best fit Use this to stress test the first operating year and confirm the owner can live on salary only. Use this as the working plan for budgeting, hiring, and cash control in the middle years. Use this to test upside hiring and delivery load without assuming the owner can take extra cash.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

The model includes a planned owner salary of $150,000, but it does not support profit distributions First-year revenue is about $116,700, payroll is $297,500, and fixed overhead is $81,000 That means owner take-home above funded salary is $0 until revenue, margin, or staffing changes