A professional services (PS) business is fundamentally different from most of its industrial and retail counterparts. This is because the primary offering cannot be standardized. A PS firm builds its reputation by providing customized and highly personalized services that draw from the unique skills of individuals.
This means that many of the conventional management techniques and principles may not apply to a PS business. Competing in a domain where the firm not only needs to fight for clients, but also think of ways to hire, manage, and retain talented professionals fundamentally alters the path to profitability.
Our CEO Srikrishnan Ganesan and Brian Hodges, President of nCloud Integrators, share their blueprint on how the modern PS firm can build a roadmap to achieve profitability.
In recent years, the tech industry has experienced a significant shift in focus from pure growth to sustainable profitability. This change has impacted professional services organizations, pushing them to reevaluate their strategies and operations. Despite increasing bill rates, many PS teams are seeing shrinking margins due to rising costs and market competition.
To give you an overview, profit margins were down 4% in 2023 for services teams, many of whom discovered that increasing bill rates alone wasn’t enough to maintain profitability.
This made two things abundantly clear:
1. PS leaders must focus on margins, utilization, and operational efficiency
2. Creating a self-sustaining, profitable PS organization is more important than ever
This means that PS leaders will need to hunker down and think about what really matters to their orgs. This requires leaders to come up with a comprehensive charter for their orgs.
One of the fundamental steps in driving profitability is establishing a clear charter for your professional services organization. This charter should outline the primary mission, financial model, key performance indicators, and core activities of your PS team.
Here are the key components of a PS charter:
A clear charter:
Once you have a clear charter that your business is anchored around, you can then work towards improving the core metrics that dictate the success of a professional services firm.
For PS firms, billable utilization is the metric that dictates the overall profitability of the firm. Generally speaking, most, if not all of your strategies will need to be oriented towards improving billable utilization. This ensures that your team is firing on all cylinders, with little to no instances of employees being ‘on the bench’.
Here are a few ways to improve utilization:
In addition to improving utilization, PS firms will also need to learn the art of hiring, managing, and retaining talented professionals. People are the beating heart of a PS firm, and an ill-managed team would either increase operating costs, or result in employee churn. The latter is particularly insidious for it leads to loss of context, which in turn forces firms to hire and train replacements under exceedingly tight constraints.
Here are a few tips to improve resource management:
That being said, it’s one thing to improve billable utilization, but another thing to ensure that you’re matching the right person, to the right job, at the right time.
While utilization focuses on how often your team is billing, optimizing rates ensures you're maximizing the value of each billed hour. The idea here is to ensure that each employee is matched to projects that they are perfectly suited to and can command a good premium for.
Here are a few tips to optimize your rates:
In addition to optimizing rates, it would also help PS firms to think of alternate ways to make the most out of their team’ expertise. This calls for exploring adjacent revenue streams, the likes of which could help them during periods when demand for services is low.
Here are a few to build alternate revenue streams:
Once you’ve gotten to fixing billable utilization and have tweaked your rate cards for maximum profitability, the next step is to think about bringing in efficiency.
Even though PS firms are built on standardization, it is possible to enforce uniformity across internal processes and operating protocols that allow it to function like a well-oiled machine.
Healthy margins are as much a function of project efficiency as everything else, and PS leaders would benefit from looking at every aspect of the firm's internal workings and eliminate friction wherever possible. With the democratization of agentic technologies (LLMs), this has never been easier to do.
Here are a few tried and tested tips to improve project efficiency:
Every PS firm has a slew of activities that lend themselves to automation opportunities readily. Here are a few ‘low-hanging fruits’ that PS leaders can look at:
Want to automate your internal processes but don’t know where to start. We have a guide to get you started.
There’s only so much that a PS leader can solve within the firm. Beyond a certain point, additional gains will need to come from managing clients. Finding the right clients, setting proper expectations, and holding them accountable to predetermined timelines.
Client engagement and accountability play a significant role in project success and profitability. What this means is that as a PS leader, it’s on you to draw out guardrails and boundaries to avoid mishaps in planning, scope creep and unrealistic timelines and expectations.
Here are a few pointers to help manage client expectations:
Once you improve your baselines metrics and have a solid strategy for managing your clients, you can then look at the longer run. As of the time of writing this article, AI and partner ecosystems are likely to play a prominent role in how PS firms grow and retain their competitive edge.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is becoming increasingly important in professional services.
AI applications in professional services:
Partners can help PS organizations extend their reach beyond their native capabilities. This not only increases the action radius of any lean PS firm, but also opens up new avenues of profitability.
Benefits of building and maintaining a partner ecosystem:
It’s not enough to have a partner ecosystem in place. You also need to have a robust system to manage it as it evolves over the years:
Achieving and maintaining profitability in professional services requires a multifaceted approach that addresses utilization, rates, project efficiency, and client engagement. By implementing these strategies, PS leaders can create a more resilient and profitable organization. As the industry continues to evolve, staying adaptable and leveraging new technologies like AI will be crucial for long-term success in the professional services space.
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