How to Track Average Order Value for Wedding Planners
Two wedding planners book 20 weddings this year. Planner A averages $8,000 per wedding, making $160,000. Planner B averages $14,000, making $280,000. The difference is not the number of clients. It is Average Order Value (AOV). AOV measures how much revenue each wedding generates. It is the key metric for scaling your planning business.
Why Average Order Value Matters for Wedding Planners
Scales revenue beyond hours. You can only plan so many weddings. Higher AOV means more money from each event without working weekends.
Shows pricing power. When clients consistently pay more, your market positioning is strong. Low AOV might signal pricing below your value.
Reveals service preferences. Some planners add coordination, floral design, or vendor management. Tracking AOV shows which services drive revenue.
Guides marketing spend. Knowing client value helps you invest more in acquisition while remaining profitable.
How to Check in GA4
GA4 tracks transactions but needs configuration for wedding planning:
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Set up ecommerce events through your booking or invoicing system. This sends purchase data automatically.
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Create custom events for deposits, final payments, and add-on purchases. Each represents revenue milestones.
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Build calculated metrics dividing revenue by completed weddings. This gives you AOV directly in reports.
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Segment by season or venue to see which weddings generate more revenue. Peak season often commands higher fees.
The setup is technical and requires ongoing maintenance when systems change.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics connects to QuickBooks, HoneyBook, or Dubsado to automatically calculate your Average Order Value. You see revenue per wedding instantly.
You might discover:
- Full planning packages average $12,000
- Partial planning averages $6,500
- Day-of coordination averages $3,000
This insight shapes your offerings. When you know which services clients value most, you can emphasize them in marketing.
ClawAnalytics also tracks add-on revenue. Venues, floral arrangements, or vendor management might add significant value. Understanding this helps you expand services strategically.
Quick Wins
Create premium packages. Design a comprehensive “white glove” planning experience. Some clients want everything handled and will pay for it.
Add vendor management fees. If you are already managing vendors, charge for it explicitly. This raises per-event revenue without much extra work.
Offer referral bonuses. When past clients refer new ones, offer a credit toward their next event or a cash reward. This increases lifetime client value.
Package add-ons. Coordinate, design, and staffing services can bundle into tiered packages. Clients prefer clarity in pricing.
Track your AOV quarterly. It should increase as you refine offerings and raise rates.