Standardize operations across every portco. Close P&L in 21 days. Expand EBITDA from day one.
PE operators who win at HVAC roll-ups understand one thing their competitors don't: the thesis is in the execution, not the acquisition.
The HVAC services market is a $159B industry growing at 2.6% CAGR, fragmented across tens of thousands of independent operators with no meaningful national share. That fragmentation is the thesis: buy local champions, centralize the back office, and extract the multiple expansion that comes from portfolio-level scale.
Twenty-seven active PE platforms have committed $50B+ in capital to HVAC consolidation. The math works. The problem is execution.
HVAC is operationally complex in ways that other home services trades are not. Seasonal demand swings 40–60% from summer peak to winter off-season. Technician utilization — the ratio of billable hours to available hours — is the single most leveraged variable in the P&L. A 10-point improvement in utilization across a 50-tech portfolio generates $600K–$900K in incremental gross margin annually with zero additional headcount.
PE operators who win at HVAC roll-ups understand this. They don't acquire and hope. They acquire with a standardized operational blueprint that goes live on day one.
Most HVAC roll-ups underperform their investment theses within 18 months. Not because the underlying businesses are weak — because integration is harder than underwriting.
RollForge deploys in 21 days. On day one, every portco operates on the same operational backbone.
When Meridian's operating partner evaluated their portfolio six months post-acquisition, the data told a clear story: three companies with identical service offerings, similar market sizes, and EBITDA margins that differed by 11 points. The top performer had structured dispatch protocols and a technician accountability system. The bottom performer was still dispatching from a whiteboard.
RollForge deployed across all three entities simultaneously. Within 90 days:
Callback rate fell from 14.2% to 6.8% portfolio-wide — driven by parts inventory alignment and technician-level coaching triggered by the callback tracking system.
Technician utilization improved 9 points, recovering ~$440K in billable hours annually.
Scheduling SLA compliance reached 94% (from a 71% baseline at the weakest entity).
The 11-point EBITDA gap between entities closed to 3 points in one operating quarter. What made it work: Meridian didn't deploy RollForge as a reporting tool. They deployed it as an operating standard.
*Illustrative. Not a guarantee.
The Command Center shows the metrics that matter for HVAC portfolio operations — not the metrics that are easy to collect.
| KPI | What It Measures | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Technician Utilization Rate | Billable hours ÷ available hours | Direct multiplier on gross margin; 10pt improvement = $600K–$900K for a 50-tech portfolio |
| Callback Rate (30-day) | Return visits within 30 days of original job | Leading indicator of technician quality and parts inventory management |
| Scheduling SLA Compliance | % of jobs meeting defined arrival windows | Customer satisfaction driver; 1pt improvement → measurable membership renewal lift |
| Dispatch Response Time | Minutes from call to technician assignment | Competitive differentiator in emergency-call markets; tracks after-hours capture rate |
| Parts Margin Variance | Gross margin on parts vs. portfolio benchmark | Procurement standardization opportunity; typically 4–7pt spread across uncoordinated portfolios |
| Maintenance Plan Attach Rate | Membership/service plan conversion on equipment service calls | Recurring revenue engine; 1pt improvement on 1,000 monthly service calls = $120K–$180K ARR |
| Revenue Per Technician | Monthly revenue per FTE tech by entity | Compensation benchmarking and market-level performance comparison |
Every tool in the RollForge platform is built for PE-backed trade operators, not generic small business owners.
RollForge deploys in 21 days. The first IC memo is on us.
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