The 50m of Kingspan in the front room (bottom right) is going to be a bit expensive

. And make sure you use solvent-free Pinkgrip to fix the insulation...
If you're like me (and have some very precise ideas about exactly where you want your various sockets) then at the very least you want to specify some heights for the various bands- for instance the above worktop sockets, do you want them 200mm above (so they'll be in the tiled bit) or 400mm above?
Also have a think about going over the top with coax/CAT5 points- I'd be putting at least 2 double CAT5 and probably 2 coax in every room (set so wherever you want a device you can get a cable to it without crossing a doorway), if you've got the thickness in the walls then think about running the data/coax in large bore ducting or conduit (so when the Next Big Idea comes along you can do something about it). Re CAT5 and coax- specify copper for both, not CCA. WF100 or CT100 for the coax, not the cheap brown stuff. For the rooms where you're definitely having serious AV capacity, double coax points are handy (if you're on satellite rather than cable or Freeview).
Outside socket (SOS)- if it is on it's own RCBO then fine, if it is on the kitchen radial or RFC then stick a DP switch inside somewhere (so if it gets wet and starts tripping everything you can isolate it)
If you can bear to do the work, it would be worth doing elevations of each wall showing exactly where you want the sockets, rads etc (especially in the kitchen put the units and worktops on a separate layer so you can see how they're going to work but you don't clutter the drawings for the spark).
And final one, do a bill of materials for how many sockets, backboxes etc you're using (work out the cable lengths as well if you like, allow 10% for badness and adhere to safe zones for the power cables (and ideally the data/coax) as well as maintaining separation and practicalities- getting cables through a steel beam or lintel is usually a no no). Split the sockets and boxes down by room on a separate sheet- makes it easier for the people doing the job, they can dump the required bits in in each room and if there's one left over they know there's a problem.
Just to cheer you up, be prepared to realise in 20 years time that you have never used half the data and coax capacity in the house (I know, I've done it)