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Leveraging Tech for Business Growth in Fire Protection with Billy Marshall of Service Trade | NPFA

Written by Paul Giannamore

Leveraging Tech for Business Growth in Fire Protection with Billy Marshall of Service Trade | NPFA

Creating Value in the Trades: Billy Marshall of ServiceTrade on Pricing, Recurring Revenue, and AI

Filmed on the show floor at NFPA, investment banker Paul Giannamore sits down with Billy Marshall, founder and CEO of ServiceTrade, for a wide-ranging conversation on how fire protection and life safety contractors build durable, valuable businesses. Billy traces his path from early-employee days at Red Hat to building ServiceTrade out of a fire contractor’s homegrown software — and lays out a clear operating playbook for owners. Below are the biggest takeaways for business owners, home and commercial services operators, and founders.

1. Your customer doesn’t care about code — they care about risk

Billy’s central argument: customers don’t want an NFPA 25 inspection form, they want freedom from business disruption and loss. The contractors who win show customers their risk in plain terms, explain what they’ll do about it, and earn the right to charge for it. Beat customers over the head with code and all they’ll ever discuss is price.

2. If all you send is an invoice, all they’ll talk about is price

When the only artifact a customer ever receives is a bill, you’ve trained them to shop on price alone. The fix is to make your value visible throughout the service relationship — not just at billing.

3. Grade your customers, and fire the worst ones

Not all customers are equal. Billy urges owners to class customers as A, B, and C, then systematically rotate out the ones who won’t “get with the program” — those who ignore deficiencies and turn their neglect into emergencies that wreck your schedule. There’s too much good demand to waste capacity on bad demand.

4. Overcome loss aversion to make the hard calls

Firing customers is emotionally hard because humans are wired for loss aversion. Billy’s advice: follow the data. If you can’t bring yourself to cut a bad customer, raise their prices until they leave, or politely refer them to a competitor better suited to emergency work.

5. Price for the value you visibly demonstrate

With demand high and skilled labor scarce, strong-brand contractors have real pricing power — but it’s only durable when value is transparent. Help customers with capital planning, get ahead of their replacement cycles, and your premium pricing sticks.

6. Recurring revenue is the asset that drives the business

Billy frames well-run service businesses as running 35%–45% gross margins with high retention and repeatable revenue — “Apple margins.” He coaches owners to track pull-through: for every dollar of inspection work, you should reliably see at least a dollar (often $1.25–$2.00) of planned maintenance revenue. That predictability is exactly what the next buyer pays a premium for.

7. Measure two things daily: tech productivity and customer productivity

Billy tells contractors to stop obsessing over gross profit and instead watch (a) how much billable work each technician completes per day (e.g., $1,500–$2,000 for an alarm tech) and (b) how reliably the customer base generates planned, non-emergency revenue.

8. The “digital wrap”: let the work market itself

A truck wrap is targeted but fleeting. Billy’s first book, The Digital Wrap, argues that technicians already create digital artifacts — GPS clock-ins, deficiency photos, inspection records — and that turning those back to the customer online creates a far stickier brand impression than a logo on a fleet.

9. “Money for Nothing”: show the work behind the absence of problems

His second book tackles a universal services problem: customers ultimately want nothing — no breakdowns, no false alarms. But if all you deliver is invisible nothing, you’re exposed to the low-price competitor. The answer is to repeatedly show customers all the work that produced that nothing, which justifies the premium.

10. Video is the single highest-leverage thing technicians can do

In a TikTok-era world, Billy says the best way to make value visible is short technician videos documenting what they find — the same way auto shops and dentists now show you the story. If you do one thing, do video; if you can’t, at least do photos.

11. The contractor as “risk terminator” — AI’s role

Riffing on The Terminator, Billy frames the modern contractor’s mission as ingesting structured and unstructured data, running it through machines, and deciding the next step to eliminate customer risk. ServiceTrade is rolling out AI that summarizes years of equipment history for a tech on arrival and converts messy video into clean customer-ready notes — with Amazon as its AI platform partner.

12. AI delivers on the broken promise of IoT

Earlier IoT efforts drowned owners in data with little signal. Billy believes AI finally cuts through the noise — surfacing which equipment, in which environment, is likely to fail and when — turning ServiceTrade’s 13+ million tracked assets into predictive signal.

13. He’s “long the trades”

With a supply-demand imbalance in skilled labor he doesn’t expect to resolve for 10–20 years, repeatable revenue, and high margins, Billy is bullish on the trades — and notes sophisticated capital (Blackstone, Audax, KKR) is moving in because they expect to make money as buyers, not because sellers are getting the better end.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Billy Marshall?
Billy Marshall is the founder and CEO of ServiceTrade, a software platform for fire protection, life safety, and mechanical trades contractors. He was an early employee at Red Hat before building ServiceTrade, which launched in 2012 and now serves roughly 600 fire and life safety customers.

What is the main way fire protection contractors create value?
By making their value visible. Rather than just delivering an invoice, the best contractors show customers their risk, educate them on their systems, document work with photos and video, and help with capital planning — which supports premium pricing and high retention.

Why does Billy Marshall say contractors should fire customers?
Because not all customers are equal. Customers who ignore deficiencies create emergencies that disrupt your schedule and prevent you from serving better customers. Grading customers A/B/C and rotating out the worst ones protects your capacity and makes the business more predictable and valuable.

What are Billy Marshall’s books about?
His first book, The Digital Wrap, argues that the digital records technicians create during service can become a powerful, sticky marketing tool. His second book, Money for Nothing, explains how showing customers the work behind a problem-free outcome lets contractors charge a premium and resist low-price competitors.

How should service contractors use AI?
Billy advises starting with a clear mission — eliminating customer risk — then finding the data sets and patterns to feed AI toward that goal. Practical uses include summarizing an asset’s service history for a technician on site and converting technician video into clean, customer-ready documentation.

Why is Billy Marshall bullish on the trades?
A long-term imbalance between high demand and scarce skilled labor, combined with repeatable revenue and gross margins of 35%–45%, makes well-run trades businesses highly attractive — which is also why major private equity firms are investing in the space.

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