WHAT “GOOD” REALLY LOOKS LIKE IN PROFESSIONAL SERVICE BENCHMARKS
Figure out if your margins are actually good, what utilization really means, and why most benchmarks don’t fit.
You’re seeing tables tell you one thing, but your gut and your bank balance tell you another. The benchmark ranges are a decent starting point, but without context, you can end up misled.
These ranges are indicative and vary depending on service model, pricing strategy and team structure. The problem is that most benchmark data lacks context. It tells you what “average” looks like, but not whether your numbers make sense for your business model.
This guide explains what professional services benchmarks really show, where they mislead, and how to use them properly.
Benchmarks give context, not a verdict.
We see time and again that benchmarks are only as useful as the financials behind them, so if your books aren’t clean and consistent, your benchmarks won’t be accurate.
We help you see between the lines and understand what a number actually means.
In professional services, margins are often higher than in product businesses because you’re selling expertise. Across most professional service firms we work with, gross margins typically sit between 55–65%, with top-performing firms reaching 70%+. For example, it’s not unusual for a marketing agency to have strong margins on paper, but still struggle with cash flow due to billing cycles and timing.
Your margins will tell you whether your prices cover your costs, but they’re not static. The bigger story you need to focus on is trend, because a healthy margin that’s shrinking will mean more than one healthy month on a single contract.
This measures how much of your team’s available time is billed to clients, i.e. being productive, not just busy.
Healthy levels sit at around 65-75% for a firm-wide view, 70-85% for mid-level consultants, and 40-60% for senior leadership figures, as they spend more time on strategy and less on delivery.
Markets and roles can differ, but utilization is often the biggest invisible driver of margin health.
These benchmarks will help you see how well you monetize client relationships, and whether your team structure scales with revenue.
From legal and consulting to creative and agency services, revenue per employee can vary quite significantly, typically between the $180-$300k range. Consulting and legal services tend to be at the higher end, with creative/agency work slightly lower.
This isn’t a rule, but a diagnostic signal to spot gaps between capacity and pricing power.
Service-based businesses don’t have inventory, but they do incur direct costs with tools and software, subcontractors and platforms they need to deliver their work.
Ignoring these will make margins look better on a spreadsheet but accurate cost allocation will help you understand what you have left after all of your essentials are paid.
We often tell people that profitability and cash flow are not the same. You can have a great margin and still run out of cash if you don’t manage invoices, timing, reserves and owner distributions. Income comes in waves, feast or famine, and that’s exactly where benchmarking without context breaks down.
Benchmarking your revenue without also factoring in cash flow could lead you to conclusions that don’t add up in your bank balance.
If you’re not sure how your margins, utilization, and revenue stack up in context, the quickest way to get clarity is to map your numbers properly.
Whether you’re a small business in South Carolina, a high-impact coach, or a creative entrepreneur who is tired of going it alone, we’re here to help you find the best route forward.
We hear it all the time, businesses ask us ‘Why don’t these numbers apply to us?’ The answer isn’t that the benchmarks are wrong, but that the comparisons aren’t like-for-like.
These common structural pitfalls are where we often see clients get stuck:
Without clear, accurate financial and consistent categorization, benchmarks don’t allow you to make informed decisions. Accounting for professional services firms is the foundation that make strategy possible. It’s what benchmark insights are built on.
We treat professional services benchmarks as diagnostics, noticing where performance misses expectation, and understanding whether an issue is temporary or structural.
We use them as tools to ask smart questions and reveal what’s structural vs fixable, supporting strategic questions, and see where performance moves and why.
They help move the conversations from ‘How do we compare?’ to ‘What do these numbers tell us about our business?’
Change starts when you understand the structural changes rather than chasing averages, and resolve your inconsistencies in your financial reporting.
Don’t file your own payroll or 1099s, work with an accountant and business insurance professional you can trust, it’s one of the best investments you can make. Payroll mistakes can cost you time, sanity, and potentially big penalties.
Reference points for measuring your individual performance, not a one-size fits all metric.
Typically a gross margin of 50-70% is average, with net margins more variable depending on the industry you work in.
Commonly around 65-75%, however there will be some variation depending on roles and working models.
Because benchmarks ignore timing and cash flow nuances, which you can overcome by making sure your books are clean.
No. As above if you have inaccurate data then your comparisons will be unreliable.
Monthly or quarterly, but whatever you decide make sure the financials are consistent and accurate.