Agency Target Multiplier and Net Multiplier
The target multiplier is the revenue multiple of direct labour costs an agency must hit to cover overhead and reach its profit goal. The net multiplier is the multiple it actually achieves. Together they are the simplest check on whether the agency is pricing its work correctly.
How the target multiplier works
Every hour your team works has a direct cost — their salary or day rate, allocated to billable time. But the agency also bears overhead: rent, software, the time spent on sales and admin, the principal's non-billable hours. The target multiplier folds all of that in, plus a profit target, and tells you: for every dollar of labour cost, you need to bill this many dollars in net revenue to run a viable business.
Target multiplier = (Direct labour + Overhead + Desired profit) / Direct labour
Net multiplier = Net revenue / Direct labour expense
Net revenue = Gross revenue − Subconsultant / pass-through costs
A worked example
A 4-person design studio:
- Annual direct labour expense: $240,000
- Annual overhead (rent, software, admin, principals' non-billable time): $168,000
- Desired profit: $48,000
- Gross revenue: $624,000
- Subconsultant pass-throughs billed at cost: $60,000
Target multiplier = ($240,000 + $168,000 + $48,000) / $240,000 = 1.90. Every dollar of direct labour must generate $1.90 in net revenue.
Net multiplier (actual): net revenue = $624,000 − $60,000 = $564,000. Net multiplier = $564,000 / $240,000 = 2.35.
The studio's net multiplier (2.35) exceeds its target (1.90) — it is billing above its break-even and profit targets. The gap represents roughly $108,000 more than needed to cover costs and hit the profit plan.
Net multiplier, also called the net labor multiplier
Net multiplier and net labor multiplier are the same metric under two names. Some firms write it net labour multiplier. All three describe net revenue divided by direct labour expense for a period. It answers one question: how many dollars of net revenue each dollar of labour produced.
Net revenue strips out pass-through costs first. Subcontractor fees and reimbursables billed at cost are not the agency's own value, so they leave before the ratio is taken. What remains is the leverage the team earned on its own time.
A net multiplier of 1.0 means the agency billed exactly its labour cost and nothing more. Everything above 1.0 has to cover overhead and profit. That is why a multiplier near 1.5 is usually a loss once overhead loads in, and why architecture and engineering firms with heavier overhead commonly run targets of 2.5 to 3.5. Lean creative studios sit lower, often 2.0 to 3.0. The benchmark that matters is your own target multiplier, calculated from your real overhead. Compare the net multiplier you achieved against that, not against an industry average.
Read it monthly or per quarter, not per project. It is a whole-practice number. Watch the trend: a net multiplier drifting down while utilisation holds steady is an early pricing warning, well before it reaches the bank balance.
What the gap between target and net multiplier tells you
If the net multiplier is below the target, the agency is under-billing relative to its cost structure. That could mean rates are too low, write-downs are too frequent, or there is too much non-billable labour being absorbed.
A below-target multiplier alongside a healthy utilization rate usually points to a pricing or realization problem. A below-target multiplier alongside low utilization points to a capacity problem.
See also: effective billing rate (a dollar-per-hour view of the same relationship) and the billable efficiency definition.
Target and net multiplier vs adjacent terms
| Term | What it measures |
|---|---|
| Target multiplier | The revenue multiple needed to cover overhead and hit profit target |
| Net multiplier | The revenue multiple actually achieved in a period |
| Effective billing rate | Revenue per hour worked (a rate, not a multiple) |
| Realization rate | Fees invoiced vs fees that could have been invoiced |
| Overhead rate | Overhead as a ratio of direct labour (a component of the multiplier calculation) |
Frequently asked questions
What is the agency target multiplier?+
The target multiplier is the multiple of direct labour costs an agency must achieve in net revenue to cover all overhead and meet its profit target. It is the break-even-and-profit benchmark for billing, expressed as a ratio.
What is the agency net multiplier?+
The net multiplier is net revenue (gross revenue minus pass-through costs billed at cost) divided by direct labour expense for the same period. It is the revenue multiple the agency actually achieved.
What is a good net multiplier for an agency?+
Industry benchmarks from architecture and engineering research commonly cite 2.5–3.5 for firms with significant overhead. Small creative studios with leaner overhead structures often target 2.0–3.0. Calculate your target multiplier from your own cost structure first, then benchmark actual performance against it.
Is the net multiplier the same as the net labor multiplier?+
Yes. Net multiplier, net labor multiplier, and net labour multiplier all name the same ratio: net revenue divided by direct labour expense for a period. The wording varies by firm and by region. The calculation is identical.
What is the net multiplier formula?+
Net multiplier = net revenue / direct labour expense, where net revenue is gross revenue minus pass-through costs billed at cost (subcontractor fees and reimbursables). Take it across a month or quarter for the whole practice, not per project.
Why is pass-through cost excluded from net revenue?+
Subcontractor fees and reimbursables billed at cost are not the agency's value creation — they flow through the business without generating margin. Excluding them ensures the multiplier reflects only the leverage the agency achieves on its own labour.
How does net multiplier differ from realization rate?+
Realization rate measures the ratio of fees billed to fees that could have been billed for work done. Net multiplier measures overall billing leverage on direct labour cost. A firm can have a high realization rate but a low net multiplier if overhead is high relative to revenue.
How do I improve a low net multiplier?+
Three levers: raise bill rates, reduce write-downs (improving realization), or reduce overhead relative to labour. Raising rates with the right clients is typically the highest-leverage move for small agencies.
What is the difference between target multiplier and effective billing rate?+
The target multiplier is a ratio (revenue to labour cost). The effective billing rate is a dollar-per-hour figure (revenue divided by hours worked). They are related, since a higher effective billing rate produces a higher net multiplier, but they are expressed differently and used at different levels of analysis.
Related calculators & guides
Work the same numbers from the next angle.
Agency Overhead Rate Calculator
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Open toolCost Rate vs Bill Rate
The fully-loaded cost of an hour versus what you charge for it — and the margin between.
Open toolAgency Hourly Rate Calculator
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Open toolAgency Profit Margin Calculator
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Open toolWhat Is Effective Billing Rate?
Effective billing rate defined — revenue divided by hours worked, with a worked example.
Open toolWhat Is Retainer Burndown?
A plain definition of retainer burndown, with the formula and a worked example.
Open toolTrack the inputs without pulling them from separate tools.
Tracking the net multiplier manually means pulling labour costs, gross revenue, and pass-through figures from different places each month. Ascend tracks billable time and generates invoices from those logs. The free tier covers one client end to end.
Start with Ascend free