Most MSPs use Roadmaps and budgets to plan projects and work with clients. But when they’re full of technical language and not connected to business goals, they lose impact. By changing how you create and share your Roadmaps and pricing, you can build more trust with clients — and get projects approved more easily.
In this section, we’ll cover:
Client Goal | Initiative Example | How It Aligns |
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Open a second office | Expand network and deploy cloud phone system | Supports growth and seamless communication |
Get compliance certification | Implement MFA, endpoint protection, and backups | Meets certification requirements |
Support hybrid work | Migrate files to SharePoint, secure remote access | Enables flexible, secure work |
Timing matters. Sharing a budget alongside your Roadmap shows you’re planning ahead — not just asking for money — and helps avoid sticker shock.
The best time to present a budget is early on, like at the start of the fiscal year or early in your partnership. This will set clear expectations and help your customer plan for the year.
Don’t worry if your first budget is an estimate. Giving your clients a price range early on is better than surprising them with the full cost later. They usually only need an estimate to do their internal planning.
Start of the calendar or fiscal year | Aligns budgeting with business planning and spending cycles. |
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After a Discovery, Assessment, or Roadmap | You’ve just uncovered what needs to happen — now it’s time to plan how to fund it. |
Before a major QBR | A perfect time to present or refine the budget and gain approvals for upcoming quarters. |
When proposing major projects | Helps frame costs in context and avoid sticker shock. |
When renewing contracts | A good chance to bundle new projects or plan around upcoming costs. |
Category | What to Look For | Examples |
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Goals | Clear, forward-looking business targets or changes the client is planning. Listen for statements about growth, strategy, or outcomes they want to achieve. |
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Initiatives | Opportunities for improvement or strategic growth that aren’t urgent but could add value. These may need planning or budget approval. |
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Action Items | Immediate, tactical items causing disruption or posing risk. These are part of your expected service delivery and usually don’t need client approvals. |
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Follow-ups | Unclear or incomplete areas where more information is needed. These often show up as vague answers or cross-team dependencies. |
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Don’t “set and forget” your project plans or budgets. Update them regularly as business goals shift, new risks emerge, or projects are finished. Plus, staying up to date shows clients you’re proactive and focused on their success.
If you use a Customer Success Platform (like Lifecycle Manager), it’s easy to keep Roadmaps and budgets up-to-date. With a unified view of each client’s goals, projects, and spending plans, you can quickly adjust timelines, flag risks, and share updated plans during QBRs.