Package Your Service Like a Product

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Most founders sell a list of services and wonder why every proposal feels different, clients want custom everything, and pricing is a guessing game. The fix is to package your service like a product so buyers know what they are getting, you know how to deliver it, and the price stops moving around with your mood. For the wider pricing system behind floors, tiers and discount rules, keep Pricing Strategy for Your Businesses: The Complete Playbook open while you work.

In this article, we’re going to discuss how to:

  • Turn Vague Services Into Clear, Named Offers
  • Set Scope, Structure And Terms That Protect Margin
  • Use Productised Service Pricing To Sell With Confidence

Define Productised Services In Practical Terms

A productised service is a standardised offer with:

  • A clear outcome
  • A fixed or tightly defined scope
  • A set price or narrow price band
  • A repeatable delivery process

You are still delivering a service, but it behaves like a product. It has a name, a spec sheet, and a price. Buyers choose it from a menu instead of asking you to invent a custom solution on the fly.

Quick sense checks:

  • You can describe the offer in one sentence without jargon
  • The same steps happen every time you deliver it
  • A new team member could follow a checklist and get 80 percent of the way there
  • You can quote the price without opening a spreadsheet

If you cannot tick these, you are still in custom-service land.

Why Productising Beats Selling Time

Selling time looks easy. You pick a day rate and hope clients do not question how you spend it. In reality, it creates constant friction.

Selling hours means:

  • Clients audit your time rather than your results
  • You feel guilty if you work fast
  • Every job is a negotiation
  • Scope creep happens quietly because ‘it only takes an extra hour’

Packaged services flip this.

When you package your service like a product:

  • You sell outcomes, not hours
  • Pricing conversations get shorter because the menu is clear
  • You can improve margin by improving the system, not working longer
  • Your team knows exactly what good delivery looks like

Productising is not about turning your work into a cheap commodity. It is about creating clarity so you can charge properly and protect your time.

Design Your Service As A Product

Start with one offer. Trying to productise everything at once is how you stall.

Step 1: Choose A Single High-Value Outcome

Pick the service where:

  • You already get good results
  • Clients ask for similar things
  • You would be happy to deliver it many times

Examples:

  • Booking 10 to 15 sales calls per month for B2B consultants
  • Rebuilding a leaky website funnel into a clean, conversion-ready one
  • Running a 30-day cashflow clean-up for SMEs
  • Producing 8 short-form videos a month for personal brands

If the outcome is vague, the product will be vague.

Step 2: Write The Offer In One Sentence

Use this template:

For [specific client type], we deliver [clear outcome] in [timeframe], including [critical inclusions], for [£X or £X–Y], with [simple guarantee or confidence feature].

If you cannot fill this out, you are not ready to price it.

Step 3: Define The Delivery Steps

List the steps from ‘yes’ to ‘done’:

  • Onboarding and information gathering
  • Any discovery or strategy work
  • Core execution stages
  • Reviews and approvals
  • Handover and wrap-up

This is the skeleton of your SOP. It is also where you start spotting waste and things that should be optional add-ons.

Productised Service Pricing In Practice

You are not guessing. Productised service pricing is built from numbers, value and positioning.

Know Your Costs

For one unit of the service, estimate:

  • Delivery time by role
  • Contractors or freelancers
  • Usage-based software or tools
  • Any materials or third-party costs
  • A sensible allowance for account management and support

Put a real hourly cost on your time and your team. No wishful thinking.

Set Margin Targets

For productised services, a healthy target is:

  • 50 to 65% gross margin on repeatable offers
  • Higher if you are heavily involved personally
  • Lower only if the service feeds a much larger back-end

Gross margin % = (Price − Direct Cost) ÷ Price.

Check the number for your recommended tier. If it is under 50 percent and you are supposed to grow off it, something must change.

Choose Floor, Target, Stretch

For each productised service:

  • Floor price: the lowest price you will accept for the standard scope
  • Target price: what you quote as normal
  • Stretch price: for high stakes work, awkward timelines or demanding clients

Write all three down. This is how you keep productised service pricing disciplined instead of emotional.

Example: Podcast Launch Package

Direct costs per launch:

  • Delivery time: £1,200
  • Freelancers: £400
  • Software and tools: £100

Direct cost: £1,700

Target gross margin: 60 percent.

Floor price = 1,700 ÷ (1 − 0.6) = £4,250

You might set:

  • Floor: £4,250
  • Target: £4,995
  • Stretch: £5,995 for complex shows or faster timelines

Anything below £4,250 is not a ‘deal’, it is a mistake.

Scope, Boundaries And Change Requests

Most productised services die not on price but on boundaries. You must make the box visible.

Write The Scope Box

For each productised service, write clearly:

  • Outcome
  • Inclusions
  • Caps
  • Exclusions
  • Add-ons

Example, ‘LinkedIn Content Engine’:

  • Outcome: ‘Daily, on-brand content that drives profile views and inbound messages’
  • Inclusions: 12 posts per month, content plan, basic visuals, scheduling
  • Caps: 2 rounds of revisions per batch, 1 strategy call per month
  • Exclusions: inbound message handling, profile management, ads
  • Add-ons: extra posts, ghost-written articles, DM handling

Put this in every proposal and on your sales page. It is not optional fine print. It is how you protect margin.

Change Requests Become Add-Ons

When a client asks:

  • ‘Can you just add X’
  • ‘Can we have another version for Y’
  • ‘Can we jump on another call’

Your default answer:

‘Happy to. That sits outside the standard package, so it would be [£X] as an add-on. Shall I include it.’

You are not being difficult. You are keeping the product intact.

Positioning And Proof For Productised Offers

Packaging and pricing are wasted if you still look like another generic service provider.

Niche The Product, Not Necessarily The Business

You can keep the company broad, but each product should be specific.

Instead of:

  • ‘Marketing services for businesses’

Use:

  • ‘Launch Funnel Sprint for coaches shifting from one-to-one to group programmes’

Instead of:

  • ‘HR consulting’

Use:

  • ‘Fixed-fee Hiring System Build for 5 to 50 person agencies’

Product names that signal outcome and audience make the price feel more credible.

Make The Product Concrete With Proof

You need:

  • Before and after snapshots: screenshots, numbers, artefacts
  • At least two short case studies for each product
  • Testimonials that mention the product name and outcome

When you quote the price, you should be able to say:

‘This is the same package we used with [client]. Before, [problem]. After, [result in numbers or specifics].’

That is far easier to defend than ‘we usually charge this for a project like this’.

Implementation Plan: Build One Productised Service In 14 Days

Do not aim for a perfect catalogue. Build one strong product and sell it.

Days 1 to 2: Pick The Service And Outcome

  • Look at past projects that went well
  • Choose one recurring outcome and client profile
  • Write the one-sentence offer

Days 3 to 5: Scope And Process

  • List inclusions, caps, exclusions and add-ons
  • Map the delivery steps and rough timings
  • Cost the work and set floor, target, stretch prices

Cross-check the numbers against your margin targets and the guidance in Pricing Strategy for Your Businesses: The Complete Playbook.

Days 6 to 8: Assets

  • Name the product
  • Write a one-page sales sheet or landing page
  • Build a simple slide or section for your proposals
  • Pull in proof: cases, screenshots, quotes

Days 9 to 11: Internal Rules

  • Write a one-page internal guide: scope, prices, add-ons, discount rules
  • Create a checklist for delivery
  • Brief anyone else involved in sales or delivery

Days 12 to 14: Sell It

  • Offer it to three recent leads who were a good fit but did not close
  • Offer it to one or two existing clients as a structured way to solve a problem
  • Note where people hesitate or get confused

Adjust wording or scope once, then hold the line for at least a month before making bigger changes.

Risks And Guardrails When You Productise

Typical problems:

  • You cram too much into the package to make it look ‘worth it’
  • You keep saying yes to custom changes and the product dissolves
  • You underprice because you are scared people will say no
  • You forget to review the offer as your skills and costs change

Guardrails:

  • Limit core deliverables and sell extras as add-ons
  • Keep a firm ‘no’ on custom work inside the product unless it is truly strategic
  • Use floor, target, stretch pricing, not your anxiety
  • Review scope, price and proof every 6 to 12 months

Productising is supposed to make life simpler. If it feels more complex, you are probably overthinking or padding.

Turn This Framework Into A Real Offer

You do not fix this by reading. You fix it by turning one messy service into a named, scoped, priced product and selling it to real clients.

Start with:

  • One offer
  • One clearly defined outcome
  • One set of prices and add-ons
  • One simple sales page or slide

Once that is working, you can add a second product, then a third. Each one becomes an asset you can sell repeatedly without reinventing the wheel.

Put This Framework To Work In Your Business

If you want help turning your main offer into a clean, profitable product, download the Offer Packaging Blueprint: Turn One Service Into a High-Value Product. Use it to structure your scope, tiers and add-ons, then plug in the numbers using the rules from Pricing Strategy for Your Businesses: The Complete Playbook so your productised service pricing is solid from day one.

Key Takeaways

  • Productised services are standardised offers with clear outcomes, scope and prices that are easy to sell and deliver.
  • Strong productised service pricing starts with real delivery costs, clear margin targets and defined floor, target and stretch levels.
  • One well-designed productised offer, sold repeatedly, will beat a messy list of custom services every time.

FAQs For Packaging Your Service Like A Product

How do I know which service to productise first?

Pick the one you deliver most often, with the cleanest outcome and the least drama. If you can look back at five similar projects in the last year, that is a good candidate. Avoid rare, one-off wins as your first product.

Can I still offer custom work as well as productised services?

Yes, but keep custom work separate and priced higher, with its own rules. Lead with your productised offers so you get the efficiency and margin benefits. Custom should be the exception, not the default.

Will productising make my service feel cheaper?

Not if you do it properly. Clear outcomes, strong proof and tight scope make you look more professional, not cheaper. Commoditisation comes from vague promises and low prices, not from structure.

What if clients keep asking to tweak the package?

Expect it. That is where add-ons and higher tiers come in. You can say, ‘That sits in the Pro version’ or ‘We can add that for £X.’ If you always edit the base product for free, the whole point of productising disappears.

How often should I revisit my productised service pricing?

Review at least once a year, sooner if your costs change or you add proof and capabilities. If demand is strong and capacity is tight, you should either raise prices, narrow scope or create a higher tier.

Do I need to show prices publicly for productised services?

If your delivery is standard and you want to reduce tyre-kickers, yes, publish prices or at least starting points. For complex or enterprise offers, you can keep exact numbers for proposals, but the structure should still be visible.

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Mike Jeavons

Author and copywriter with an MA in Creative Writing. Mike has more than 10 years’ experience writing copy for major brands in finance, entertainment, business and property.

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