- Pay your staff well enough to keep them, develop them, and attract new ones.
- To recruit employees, provide competitive perks.
- To increase team productivity, provide high-quality training programmes.
- Maintaining and acquiring new assets, such as vehicles and computers, as well as installing new technologies when needed
- Expand the business.
- Generate a decent amount of operational profit.
- Pricing that is in line with the business model of the company: Do you want to go for a specialized, high value, or a low cost/volume market?
- Pricing schemes include the following: Should you provide a discount during the air conditioning service shoulder season or not? To promote or not to promote?
- Methods and procedures for determining market prices: Whatever is the most effective for which market? For instance, what is the difference between hvac services and installation and hvac maintenance?
- Recovering (and being aware of) your expenses: Is it better to organize by department or by market segment?
- Pricing in accordance with market value: What is the value of your hvac technician’s knowledge? What is the value of your air conditioning service?
- Bundling (for example, a flat-rate "rejuvenation" service that includes hvac repair/s for a single charge)
- Benefits of a product/service, such as a lifetime warranty on repairs: What does that cost, and how much can you charge for hvac maintenance or for such an advantage?
- Install: With shoulder season promotions, gross profit per man day, or dual overhead;
- Residential demand service: flat cost with bundling and club membership savings;
- Commercial demand service: Commercial flat fee or time and materials;
- Gross profit per hvac technician/crew day as a commercial substitute;
- Dual overhead in commercial design-build;
- Dual overhead in a new home (custom or spec);
- Breakeven or gross margin % for residential hvac maintenance (this is labor-intensive);
- Breakeven + a goal profit contributed by the building/equipment profile for commercial maintenance.