Ok team, I'll take the bait! My answer is a solid "maybe". Haha. Simply because it's always an "it depends" answer. Some will maintain that the first 3 rules are: Do a predictive site survey, do an active site survey, do a post-install site survey. But it depends on your physical space, depends on what you're designing for (voice, location, HD, general coverage), depends on your applications (what's going to be driving the channel utilization), depends on user/client density, and it depends to a large degree on your WLAN design experience.
Solid planning can often get you 90% home and AutoRF can do a great job to close the gap. And manual settings can sometimes address any corner cases. In a school with an MR42 per classroom design, or a hotel with an MR30H per guest room, or a stadium or large auditorium design, or typical carpeted cubicle office space with an AP per 2500 square feet... once you've done a couple of these deployments, it becomes routine enough that paying lots of professional services dollars for formal site surveys is not where you're likely to spend your IT budget.
If it's a good-sized customer and they're not too experienced and they'll have lots of future deployments, I'll recommend professional services for an active site survey, as everyone should have to do that once! I'm half joking, but that means I'm half serious too. It's an excellent learning experience that forces a customer to understand (or at least appreciate) the design factors, interference sources, neighboring WLANs or other things they didn't know about, and from a design perspective it shows them that if they just go deploy APs haphazardly without proper planning, they're asking for trouble.
In many other cases, and perhaps a LOT more often, I tend to recommend predictive site surveys, and there's plenty of tools and training to do so. It's typically worth the little bit of time and effort to pop in some floorplans, set measurements and building materials, and start placing APs to confirm full and adequate coverage specific to your parameters. Even if someone doesn't understand all the inputs to the design and the physics of RF, the resulting heat maps are simple to understand. I also know and have customers who pay partners for less expensive predictive site surveys as a middle-ground on large-scale projects.
[EDIT - Afterthought] I forgot to mention there's a support article as well if you're new to this and wanted to leverage a Meraki AP in Site Survey mode.
https://documentation.meraki.com/MR/WiFi_Basics_and_Best_Practices/Conducting_Site_Surveys_with_MR_A...