Corporate wellness elective ultrasound events are one of the most underexplored revenue channels available to studio operators. Progressive employers have been expanding prenatal wellness benefits for years. Paid maternity leave, lactation support, doula stipends, and prenatal care concierge services are now common at mid-to-large companies. A sponsored elective ultrasound event fits naturally into this existing benefit structure, and studios with the right pitch can lock in high-ticket contracts that generate more revenue per event than dozens of individual sessions.
The B2B sales motion is different from consumer marketing. Corporate decision-makers want a professional proposal, clear pricing, and a reliable service delivery track record. If you have been building your studio as a consumer-facing business and have not looked at the corporate channel, this guide explains what it takes to start.
Corporate wellness elective ultrasound events involve studios partnering with employers to offer on-site or studio-based 4D ultrasound sessions as a premium prenatal wellness benefit for pregnant employees. Studios provide the event as a sponsored service, priced as a group package or per-session contract. These contracts are typically worth $2,000 to $10,000 or more per event, depending on company size and session count.
Last Updated: June 2026
Why This Market Exists and Why Studios Are Positioned to Win It
Corporate wellness elective ultrasound events exist because employers competing for talent have expanded their prenatal and family benefit offerings to differentiate themselves. A sponsored 4D ultrasound session is a visible, emotionally resonant benefit that pregnant employees remember and talk about. It costs a fraction of other premium wellness benefits and generates strong employee goodwill. For studios, this creates a client acquisition channel where the employer pays for sessions that generate both direct revenue and social proof through employee word-of-mouth.
According to the Small Business Administration, businesses in the wellness and personal service categories that develop B2B revenue streams alongside consumer offerings consistently demonstrate more resilient revenue profiles, particularly in markets where consumer booking patterns are seasonally variable.
Elective studios have natural advantages in this market. They already have the equipment, the trained operators, and the premium service positioning. What they typically lack is a B2B pitch deck and a pricing structure designed for group contracts rather than individual sessions.
Who the Corporate Decision-Makers Are
In most companies, employee wellness benefits are managed by Human Resources or a dedicated People Operations function. At mid-size companies, this is often a benefits manager or HR generalist. At larger companies, there may be a dedicated wellness program director or a VP of Total Rewards. At small companies, it is usually the business owner or office manager directly.
The pitch lands differently depending on the decision-maker. HR benefits managers think in terms of cost per employee, utilization rates, and program documentation. Business owners at small companies think in terms of morale and retention. Tailor the conversation accordingly.
Identifying Target Accounts
Companies most likely to say yes to a corporate wellness ultrasound program share several characteristics: they already offer enhanced maternity benefits, they are in industries with tight talent competition such as technology, healthcare administration, or financial services, and they have enough pregnant employees in a given year to make a group event feasible. A company with two pregnant employees per year is not your target account. A company with fifteen to thirty is.
Building Your Corporate Offer
The corporate offer must look and feel different from your consumer booking page. It needs a proposal document, defined service tiers, and clear logistics language. Here is what a solid corporate wellness package structure looks like:
Option A: On-Site Event
You bring your mobile equipment to the company’s location. You run sessions in a private space provided by the employer, typically a conference room or wellness room. The employer pays a flat event fee that covers setup, a defined number of sessions, and digital delivery for all participants. Pricing varies by session count and travel requirements but should reflect the full operational cost plus your premium event margin.
Option B: Studio-Based Group Package
The employer purchases a block of sessions at a negotiated group rate. Pregnant employees book individually within the block. This keeps your operation at your own studio, which simplifies logistics. The employer may subsidize all or part of each session cost, with employees booking directly. This model works better when the employer’s office is near your studio location.
Option C: Annual Wellness Benefit Contract
The employer signs an annual agreement providing a defined benefit allotment per pregnant employee, for example, one premium session with all digital content included. The studio bills the employer at the contracted rate per utilization. This creates recurring B2B revenue without requiring an event format.
What to Include in a Corporate Proposal
A professional proposal document closes corporate wellness deals. Sending an email with a price quote does not. The proposal should include a one-page overview of your studio and service, a clear description of the event format you are proposing, defined session count and duration, logistics requirements from the employer such as room size and privacy, your professional liability insurance documentation, pricing presented as a clear investment summary, and testimonials from previous clients if available.
Keep the proposal to two to three pages. Corporate HR teams review many vendor proposals. A concise, professional document that answers their questions clearly outperforms a lengthy document that buries the key information.
Pricing Corporate Wellness Contracts
Group and corporate pricing should reflect your full operational cost, including setup and breakdown time, travel if on-site, equipment use, operator time, and digital delivery production. Then add your event premium margin, which reflects the convenience and exclusivity of a corporate arrangement.
Underpricing corporate work is a common mistake. The effort to acquire a corporate client, proposal, calls, contract negotiation, event logistics, is significant. Price it to reflect that reality. A corporate event generating $3,000 in revenue at appropriate margins is more valuable than a $3,000 revenue month from twelve individual sessions requiring twelve separate client interactions.
We have seen studio owners undercut their own corporate pricing out of concern about winning the contract, only to find the event unprofitable after accounting for full operational time. Corporate clients who value the service will pay a professional price. Those who will not are not your target account.
Following Up After an Event
The corporate relationship does not end with the event. Send a summary to the HR contact within a week. Include participant count, any testimonials from participants collected with permission, and a note about scheduling the next event or annual benefit contract. The studios that grow their corporate revenue year over year are the ones that treat each event as a relationship building moment, not a one-time transaction.
Ready to Build a B2B Revenue Channel for Your Studio?
Corporate wellness contracting requires business development skills that go beyond running sessions. If you want to discuss how to build your studio’s B2B offer, proposal structure, or pricing model, the Ultrasound Trainers team has worked with studio owners on exactly this kind of revenue expansion.
Explore Business TrainingThis content is produced by Ultrasound Trainers for studio operators exploring B2B and corporate revenue strategies. It does not constitute legal or financial advice. Contract structures, pricing, and compliance requirements vary by state and business model. Consult qualified professionals for your specific situation.
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