Journal · Corporate AV · BOM Guide

The AV BOM, itemized.

If you've ever signed a quote that turned into a six-figure surprise on show day, the problem was the bill of materials. Here's what an honest AV BOM looks like for a corporate product launch — gear, crew, days, content, redundancy. Line by line.

Published 2026-05-15 · ~9 min read · AnyDay Live Studio

The five categories every BOM needs

A complete AV bill of materials for a corporate product launch breaks into five categories. Miss one and the show breaks. Cover all five and the show holds.

  1. Gear — every piece of hardware in the room, by brand and model
  2. Crew — every named role on the call, by day
  3. Days — every day on the calendar, including load-in and load-out
  4. Content — every video, graphic, audio cue, and asset on the playback chain
  5. Redundancy — every backup deck, hot-swap, and failover, by system

A BOM that lists only gear is a rental list. A BOM that lists gear plus crew is a vendor quote. A BOM that covers all five is a production plan.

1. Gear — brand and model, not category

A bad BOM line item: "Audio system." A correct BOM line item: "L-Acoustics K2 line array, 12 boxes flown left and right, with KS28 sub array on the ground, processed through DiGiCo Quantum 338 at front-of-house."

Specificity is the difference between a quote you can lock and a quote that turns into a change order on show day. Demand brand and model for every line.

The categories your BOM should specify:

For a product launch specifically — the reveal mechanic itself gets its own line. Custom rigging for the reveal product, the rig to lift the cover, the integration of pyro or cold-spark or kinetics. None of that fits inside a generic "lighting" line.

2. Crew — named roles, by day

The BOM should list every crew role and the days each role is on the call. A correct line: "Front-of-House engineer · Days -1, 0, +1 (load-in, show, load-out)." Not "Audio crew."

Typical crew roles on a corporate product launch:

For a launch with a reveal moment, add: reveal mechanic operator — the person whose job is the four-frame window when the product is revealed. That role doesn't fit inside any other line.

Per-diem and travel for each crew member should be in the BOM as a line item, not buried in a "miscellaneous" line.

3. Days — every day on the calendar, including the ones you don't think about

A common BOM mistake: pricing only the show day. The real day count for a one-day product launch usually looks like this:

That's six days of crew labor for what looks like a "one-day event." A BOM that prices only Day 0 is a BOM that's wrong by 80%.

For multi-day events — conferences, multi-stop tours — add a load-in day per major rig change and a contingency day before each public-facing show.

4. Content — every asset on the playback chain

Content is the line item that surprises producers more than any other. A correct BOM specifies:

Each line should specify who's producing it (us, your agency, your in-house team), delivery deadline (typically 5-7 days before show), format spec (4K ProRes, h.264 for broadcast, etc.), and QC pass (when does it get reviewed on the actual wall before show).

If the BOM doesn't separate content production from playback hardware, you're going to get a surprise bill from somewhere.

5. Redundancy — every backup, by system

A corporate keynote can fail because the talent forgets a line. A product launch can fail because the playback server crashed during the reveal. The difference between the two is redundancy planning.

Every BOM should specify redundancy for these systems:

For the reveal moment specifically: the cue should be triggerable from both a hardline GPI/MIDI trigger and an RF backup. Two engineers should know the cue. The exact "fire" command should be written on a card next to every operator who's part of the moment.

What a complete BOM looks like

For a 1,500-cap corporate product launch in Vegas, on a 16:9 mainstage with a custom LED canvas, a reveal cue, broadcast IMAG, and a global stream — the BOM should be 4-6 pages. If you're being shown a one-page BOM with vague categories, ask for the real one.

Categories on the cover sheet:

  1. Gear (3-5 pages, brand + model on every line)
  2. Crew (1 page, named roles + days)
  3. Calendar (1 page, day-by-day from Day -3 through Day +2)
  4. Content schedule (1 page, deliverable list + spec + deadline + QC pass)
  5. Redundancy summary (1 page, per-system)
  6. Total (1 line — all-in)

An honest production studio writes a BOM that takes a careful reader 20 minutes to digest. A bad vendor writes a BOM that takes 30 seconds. The difference is what shows up on the change-order log on show day.

What's NOT in a good BOM

Some line items signal the vendor is leaving themselves an out — and you'll see the bill later. Watch for:

If your BOM has any of these, you don't have a BOM. You have a fee schedule with an asterisk.

Inspired? Let's work together.

If your next product launch is on the calendar, send us a brief at hello@anydaylive.com. We'll send a scoped quote with a real BOM inside four hours. Line by line. Brand and model. Every day on the calendar.

Inspired? Let's work together.