A service becomes a product (or more precisely, a “productized service”) at the point when it is standardized, packaged, and sold like a product — with fixed scope, predefined deliverables, set pricing, and repeatable processes that reduce heavy customization and variability.
Key Transition Point
- Classic services are custom, intangible, time-based, variable (different every time), and often scoped per client (e.g., bespoke consulting, one-off graphic design projects).
- It crosses into product territory through productization when:
- The offering is turned into a defined, repeatable package (“Buy this exact thing for $X and get Y”).
- Customization is minimized or eliminated (80-90% standardized).
- It can be sold repeatedly with little additional tailoring.
- Delivery becomes scalable (often with templates, automation, or systems).
- The focus shifts from selling hours/expertise to selling a specific outcome or fixed result.
Concise Examples
- Custom website design (service) → “10-page WordPress site package with SEO setup for $4,999” (productized service).
- Hourly marketing consulting (service) → “Monthly lead-gen retainer with fixed reports, 20 posts + ads management for $2,500/mo” (productized).
- Bespoke legal advice (service) → Packaged “Employment law compliance audit toolkit + 2-hour review for $1,200” (productized).
In short: A service becomes a product when it stops being primarily custom and variable and starts being reliably packaged, priced, and scalable like an off-the-shelf item. This is the core idea behind “productized services” in modern commerce.