May 1, 2026
What should a restoration company business plan include? A restoration company business plan should include a clear revenue and margin target, a defined service mix and geographic strategy, a staffing and management development plan, a capital allocation strategy, and 90-day operational priorities — reviewed quarterly and updated annually.
Most restoration business plans share a common feature: written once, presented to a bank or franchisor, and never looked at again. A business plan that doesn’t drive weekly decisions is not a business plan — it’s a writing exercise. The restoration owners who build companies intentionally do it with a living plan that is specific, measurable, and reviewed regularly.
Not just revenue — margin. Your financial target should specify: target revenue by service line, target gross margin by service line, target overhead as a percentage of revenue, target net margin, and target owner compensation. If you can’t articulate those five numbers for next year, you don’t have a financial plan.
What kind of company are you building, and for whom? Service mix (mitigation-only vs. full-service), market focus (residential volume vs. commercial specialist vs. hybrid), geographic strategy, and customer type — each choice shapes capital requirements, staffing, and margin profile. Without strategic direction, every opportunity looks equally valid and you end up excelling at nothing.
What positions need to be filled in the next 12 months? Who internally has promotion potential? What is your recruiting pipeline? At what revenue level do you need each additional hire? Most restoration companies hire reactively — when overwhelmed they hire, when slow they stop. A people plan built 12 months in advance converts labor cost from a crisis reaction into a strategic variable.
Annual plans are too abstract to drive daily behavior. Each quarter: identify 3-5 operational priorities, assign an owner to each, define what “done” looks like, set a completion date, and review progress weekly. This is the mechanism that converts a business plan from a document into a management system.
The 90-day priority queue should be updated quarterly. Annual financial targets and strategic direction should be reviewed and updated annually — ideally in Q4 for the coming year.
Well-managed restoration companies typically achieve 8-15% net margin. Best-in-class operators with strong job costing, low overhead, and commercial account mix can achieve 15-20%. Below 5% indicates structural problems requiring diagnostic attention.
Mike McCabe is The Profit Detective — a 36-year restoration industry veteran and Fractional Operations Manager at Floodlight Consulting Group. Strategic planning is a core component of his diagnostic practice.
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