Thursday, January 30, 2014

The Best Home Builder Shows in Vegas

The Best Home Builder Shows in Vegas
2/5/14 From Concept to Reality

Strategies for a Profitable Project

2/6/14 Increase Your 50+ Market Share

by Winning Sales from the Resale Market


2/7/14 Best in Building Program

How To Increase Sales Revenue and Reduce Unnecessary Costs

What do Las Vegas, IBS & BIB all have in common?

The most success driven home builders, sales & marketing professionals and Bob Schultz will all be there.

The most important industry information is ready for you in just a few short weeks. I am honored to be presenting at my 29th consecutive NAHB Convention - IBS. A special message for those of you who invest the time and money to attend, but find that an hour or so of education and strategy sessions are just not enough. B.I.B - An intense and extended seminar, workshop and interactive sessions: The ROI on your time and participation will be immeasurable. Stay and join your peers.

12/20/2013 Goal Setting For 2014

As the end of the year draws closer, determine where you are in relation to the sales, financial, and customer satisfaction goals you set for 2013. If you are behind where you projected yourself to be, then assess and analyze to determine what you have to do to get back on track.

Bob Schultz, Contributing Editor



December 20, 2013

What did you accomplish in 2013?

A good way to plan for the new year is to ask yourself that question. Why? Because past performance is always a good indication of potential future success. So, look back before you move forward. Review your goals, activities, and performance benchmarks for 2013. Here are some items to consider as you make your assessment.

Carefully assemble the data needed for this review. As the end of the year draws closer, determine where you are in relation to the sales, financial, and customer satisfaction goals you set for 2013. If you are on track, great, and congratulations.

On the other hand, if you are behind where you projected yourself to be, then assess and analyze to determine what you have to do to get back on track. Next, think through all the actions, activities, and tactics you executed exceptionally well throughout this year. Determine why you performed those tasks so well and identify what you need to do to assure that you keep doing those tasks throughout 2013 and into 2014.

Likewise, review what you didn’t do as well and determine what you must immediately do to become more proficient in each and every one of those areas as you go forward.

Consider using 69 benchmarking segments—52 weekly, 12 monthly, four quarterly, and one annual—if you really want to drill down in the historic data. This rear-view mirror assessment will give you a sense of what you may need to do more systematically as you move forward. By keeping the focus and attention on shorter weekly segments, you’ll be able to achieve much more consistency and urgency in gathering information. Reviewing and assessing each of 12 months will allow more time to make quick adjustments as needed, and major reviews and corrections over four quarters will provide a much stronger possibility of achieving, or exceeding, annual goals and objectives in the future.

After you have assessed and determined what you did well and what needs to be improved, meet with the appropriate members of your team to create an action plan with time lines for implementation to achieve measurable improvement in the year ahead. Here’s an additional tool to help you assess what you accomplished in 2013: I presented a list of “25 Proven Ways to Increase Sales” in last month’s Professional Builder (see PB November 2013 or ProBuilder.com). Take that list, create a simple spreadsheet, and score each of the 25 items as you see it today on a scale of A to F.

A—Got it covered, do it all well and consistently. Identify why and how this has been accomplished. Action Plan: Maintain.

B—Somewhat covered and fairly consistent. Identify why and how this was accomplished. Action Plan: Improve where needed.

C—Varies as to levels of excellence and consistency. Identify why. Action Plan: Immediate improvement.

D—Not even close to a process or system to achieve success. Identify why not. Action Plan: Critical action needed immediately or concede defeat.

F—No clue where we are. Action Plan: Your call as to if you intend to try to stay in business.

A few more thoughts to consider:

• “When something becomes personal, it becomes important.” Builders want sales revenue and salespeople want financial compensation for their sales. For the most part, builders are responsible for nearly all (if not all) of the costs and expenses related to generating the leads and prospects to produce the sales. Pretty simple, straight forward, and personal.

• “You cannot manage and therefore improve that which you do not measure.” To increase the ROI on all sales-related costs and activities, builders, sales and marketing managers, and salespeople should have a passion for knowing and understanding the important metrics of their business.

• “In new home sales, if we only look at a sale as an objective rather than as the end result of a series of activities, actions, and expenses measured against acceptable levels of performance, then we really do not know where we are or what we accomplished.” Develop a vision for those possibilities.

Be sure that you have a system and process in place that consistently provides the costs, numbers, and ratios. Then you can more easily and accurately answer these questions: What did you accomplish in 2013? How did you do it? How many sales and how much revenue and profit did you achieve? How much time, money, and human resources were invested in the process? What was the ROI on the financial and human resources invested?

Using all this information as a frame of reference and creating an appropriate and formative action plan, I promise that you will be able to increase sales conversion ratios and begin to reduce unnecessary costs going into 2014.

But beyond these assessments and reviews, attitude is critical. Remember that success can often times be the biggest breeder of complacency. The recent upturn in many markets is starting to show some signs of that. Also know that no market ever remains great or bad forever. Always stay grounded in reality and be focused on the fundamentals, disciplines, measurable benchmarks, and accountability that are required for consistent optimum performance. Increase sales revenue and reduce unnecessary costs without sacrificing quality, integrity, and sound business practices. Do not allow yourself to get distracted by irrational exuberance or unfounded optimism.

Being a pragmatist with more than four decades of experience in our industry—enduring four major housing recessions along the way—I am convinced that history does repeat itself. With the continued upward pressure on all of your construction and land costs leading to price increases, and the strong potential of increasing interest rates over time, affordability will become a major issue. Also, there is always the omnipresent possibility of any national or global event that could quickly cause fear and pushback from potential buyers.

Then all of a sudden, just as the market did not that long ago, we could go from hot to not in an instant. Don’t plan on that to happen, for that outlook would be pessimistic and not appropriate; however, you should always be preparing for that possibility. Doing so is good judgment and very appropriate. A final thought: Where does good judgment come from? Experience. Where does experience come from? Bad judgment.

11/15/2013 25 Proven Ways to Increase Sales

A comprehensive strategy for reviewing and improving your sales operation

Bob Schultz, Contributing Editor



November 15, 2013

If you look at what you are doing and the way you are presently doing it, how many sales and how much revenue do you think you are missing? How much are you misspending in the process, and what can you do to fix it?

To begin, it is imperative that you understand the differences between marketing and sales, and that you have a process to consistently manage and measure the objectives and results of each. For home builders, marketing takes two predominant forms. The first involves research, analysis, and interpretation of information to determine whether your product is well positioned in your marketplace. The second is to provide a reasonable projection of what your sales absorption should be expected to produce.

The following list offers 25 ways that your sales operation can benchmark, assess, and improve its processes. A single step, in and of itself, will not make a substantial difference as none of them is a silver bullet, the one thing, the big secret, or the newest strategy guaranteed to increase your sales. Review them all and evaluate your current standing against the entire list. Commit to an action plan for making improvements where they are needed, and you will begin to make a significant difference. The magic is in the mix. These steps are not easy. Embarking on this path will require focus and  an understanding of the value of these principles. Only then will you be able to motivate your team to take the action needed to create more sales success.

Measure 

1. Periodically conduct an independent competitive market study and positioning assessment of your company and its offerings.
2. Track monthly sales and closings in your competitive resale market areas and price ranges. Analyze trends, such as the number of closings, days on market, and who the selling agents are, on a quarterly basis.
3. Review and print the complete website of all competing home builders and check each one again monthly, noting any changes in offerings or the status of sales.
4. Send salespeople to personally visit and provide a competitive shop report of all competitive builders at least quarterly.
5. Conduct Realtor focus groups twice annually.
Another critical role of marketing is the creation, implementation, and measurement of resources used to draw homebuyers to interact with your sales people. This is especially important when using social media. Being liked is highly overrated if it does not lead to a measurable number of contacts, and then to sales. Measure the following; this data will let you know if the likes are producing sales:
6. Website visits against source, customer contact information provided on website, contacts made, appointments set, and sales converted.
7. Cost of traffic units by source.
8. Cost of sales by traffic source.
9. Conversion ratios by salesperson, by source.
10. Referral sales.

Mine Those Contacts 

Selling new homes is a contact sport. To maximize the number of contacts, take these recommendations to heart:

11. Be open for the convenience of the customer.
12. Be properly staffed, especially during peak traffic times.
13. Utilize assistants. One good new-home salesperson, working in conjunction with a well-trained, motivated assistant will outsell two salespeople in the same situation.
14. Hold a monthly drawing to acquire basic and accurate contact information from all visitors.
15. Have your sales team focus on follow-through and contact all prospects. Measure that activity and its results.

Sales Prep 

The point of purchase is where the rubber meets the road. Spending money and human resources just  to generate traffic is wasteful and simply gives your salespeople more chances to fail—unless your team has mastered the necessary skills. To improve your conversion ratios, follow these tips:

16. Use a targeted form of compensation where money is earned and escalate for achieving and exceeding levels of sales on a quarterly basis. The compensation should be calculated to be congruent with profit levels, and restarts each quarter. Do not use a fixed percentage of the sales price as your gauge.
17. All that the customer sees—signs, landscaping, models, sales office, amenities, selections center, and the like—must be show ready at all times.
18. Communication, demonstrating, closing, and negotiation skills must be highly developed through inculcation and become second nature when interacting with a customer.
19. Every sales representative that a customer encounters must be psychologically and emotionally ready to sell.
20.  Everyone must expect a sale to occur on the first visit, or if that doesn’t happen, a conditional sale; or if that is not going to happen, an appointment to meet again will be made; and if that doesn’t occur, an agreement for a call or contact; and if that doesn’t happen, it’s time to assess why not.

Sales Management 

You cannot manage and therefore improve what you do not measure. To create a high-performing sales team:

21. Learn to hire right, and when required, fire right. Do not hire for experience as far too frequently that experience is the greatest barrier to becoming extraordinary.
22. Train for the purpose of skill development and to provide a well-proven basis for change of behavior. Motivate to provoke the use of those skills, and don’t confuse the two.
23. Use simulated selling drills to increase sales competence to a high level of accountability performance. These drills, which salespeople know unfavorably as role playing, are not an option and should not be subject to popular opinion and consensus.
24. Mystery video shop and score against a high standard, view with your salespeople, and coach using the video shop at least twice annually.
25. Lead with a purpose. When placed in command, take charge.

Given the uptick in the market for many builders, the prospect of having a modicum of success can become the biggest breeder of complacency. Don’t let that happen. This list is just the tip of the iceberg, but it’s a good place to begin an assessment; consider converting it into your own self-evaluation tool. And please feel free to contact me with any questions or situations you would like to discuss.

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11/15/2013 Closing the Sales Fulfillment Gap, Part II: Action Amidst the Angst

Builders weigh in with their own, still-evolving solutions on how best to shepherd customers from contract to closing.

Scott Sedam, Contributing Editor



November 15, 2013

Last month in the October issue, we broached one of the greatest profit-sapping issues in home building; how to manage customers from sign-up through to the closing table, having met every decision date on time with a smile. It’s a problem that spawns an almost universal groan, yet generates little action toward a remedy or better yet, prevention. I described a 12-step sequence that greatly enhances the odds of success in this process then decided to take it to the streets—the home building streets—and gather some reaction from builders and perhaps a couple of sales trainers. I was hard on sales trainers in the last article in particular because after calling ten builders to learn how their trainers, either internal or external, address the problem I call “sales fulfillment” what I got was a universal, “They don’t.”

I then sent a copy of the first article to a cross section of builders and received a wide variety of responses, some short and sweet and others with considerable detail. A common word emerged as I read those replies—communication. Is that all there is, just improved communication between sales, the design center, purchasing, construction, and the customer and then everything gets better? As Dr. John Douglas, one of my favorite college professors, used to admonish, “Communication is never the problem; it is merely a symptom.” Symptoms, of course, are indicators of a deeper glitch afoot in the system, and we’d be wise to remember Dr. Douglas’ warning as we plow through these responses. In my 40 years in business, I found that an intense focus on outward communication cannot only mask the real problem; it can actually lead you astray. On these pages you will find observations and ideas from builders who, if they have not solved the problem, are owning up to it and making progress.

Mike Humphrey
David Weekley Homes, Houston, Texas 

This may sound simplistic but there are some essential basics. Hire the right person to the expected job outcomes/fit, attitude, and do it in a purposeful, scientific way. Train them. Their success is our responsibility since we picked them. Support them with the right tools. Benchmark against others, including those outside the industry, such as retail, etc. Survey customers and listen to their feedback both positive (celebration and reward) and negative (process first and person second with corrective action). Work on development plans with your people. Hire, train, and support toward the outcome you desire.

Dwight Sandlin
Signature Homes, Birmingham, Ala. 

Solving this issue requires a resolution of competing perspectives. Finance wants a margin that exceeds pro forma; design wants the coolest look; production wants a box, etc. We decided to create small teams with membership from each department required to accomplish the goal. We are just beginning, but our people are very excited about the teams and believe they will have more control of their own issues.

Jeff Czar
President, Armadillo Homes, San Antonio, Texas 

All selections are made by our sales people with customers in our sales centers. While we have many choices, they are done in a way whereby the customer is not overwhelmed. We try to provide the popular colors and options and focus them around design packages. Our customers can upgrade from there if they choose, but there are no handoffs. One single source, one message, and we feel that’s a better customer experience. Our sales agents are trained to cover the dos and don’ts during the selection process, and our customers are told that once the home is started there are no changes. Therefore, together the sales agent and customer verify all selections and options before the contract is sent into our office and ratified by me. To avoid having to tell the customer “No,” we make sure they understand that if a change must be made it requires a change order fee of $250 plus the cost of the change up front. This makes it their choice, but protects us, our schedule, and our margin.

Chris Cates
Caviness & Cates, Fayetteville, N.C. 

This issue had been Item No. 1 for us this year, and we attacked it full force. We went after additional sales and strayed from our formula. We are a spec builder, and we have always limited changes to our plans. We began allowing this and in return lost margin based on time, efficiency, and not charging enough for the changes and/or upgrades. We sat down as a group and pared the changes and upgrades that we would offer. As hard as it was to say to our customers, we had to give them a “quality no.” It’s a work in progress and the most important thing you can do is communicate with your staff and your customers. How your departments within your organization communicate also is critical.

Gord Bontje
Laebon Developments, Red Deer, Alberta 

In our area it is normal practice for salespeople to manage the fulfillment process. That is, get the selections made, coordinate the final prints, do the walkthroughs, etc. We don’t do that, but for a different reason than you might expect. My reason is that I think my salespeople should be selling. I let them write an agreement, get the conditions removed, spend a few hours turning the deal over to our office and field people, and then forget the buyer. I think the customer is better served that way than by having salespeople also act as clerical workers—something that the profile of a good sales person doesn’t ever contain. And, I get more sales.

John Howe
President, Omega Builders, Temple, Texas 

We prided ourselves on being a builder that embraced customization. The national builders cannot stretch a garage or master bedroom to fit your needs, nor can they customize a covered patio to the buyer’s exact wishes with an extra column. This “just-the-way-you-like-it” approach (to steal from Whataburger) we believed set us apart from the giants and gave us an edge. But the recession made things worse. We were willing to completely customize a 1,400 sq. ft. plan, stretching it any which way possible, changing sizes of doors, etc. just to make a sale. The lack of a defined process and clearly stated expectations created chaos, mistakes, missed closing dates, higher cost (less profit), and had an adverse effect on the very thing we wanted—high customer satisfaction.

Since then we have gone through substantial change, examining our entire process from contracting through closing, beginning with clearly defining the process. Buyers are informed verbally and in writing what to expect and exactly what changes can be made and when. Cut-off dates are defined as part of the purchase contract and since implementation of this policy, the number of change orders has decreased dramatically yet the dollar amount hasn’t. The first change order at the time of selections is free, but additional changes incur escalating charges. We determined the most popular structural (plan) options our customers like and offer them as predrawn and prepriced plan options. They have to be chosen at the time of contracting.

We expanded the number of predefined and prepriced standard options and established standard color families, which more than 80 percent of our buyers chose. This simplified the process for everyone and eliminated surprises. Our communication process includes: preconstruction conference call with sales agent and superintendent, preconstruction site walk, pre-drywall site walk including a firm close date set at this time, weekly buyer phone calls with superintendent and sales agent on Friday, recapping the week’s activity, preview of next week’s schedule, buyer concerns, and buyer deliverables. We see the payoff through happier customers and higher referral rates. We see comments like, “Omega is so easy to work with;” “We always know what is going on;” “Omega is the only builder in the area who consistently completes their homes and gets them closed on time.” Our Realtor sales have gone from about 45 percent per year to 60 percent. This took a lot of time and effort, but the results are worth it.

Bob Schultz
New Home Sales Specialist, Boca Raton, Fla. 

It is a fundamental responsibility of sales management to continually increase the efficiency and effectiveness of each sales team member, understanding that the entire company is the sales team. Most traditional training does not address the culmination of good sales process—on time closings and achieving profitable margins. This is what I try to instill into builder management:

1. Appropriate sales and operational process, consistently executed, takes the pressure off of people. This provides time to focus on the requirements of sales fulfillment.
2. Compliance requires processes that are jointly established, communicated, and understood by all involved. Establish incentives for compliance and consequences for noncompliance.
3. Establish all activities and actions with timelines that must be achieved by each department and individual, including documents, information, and steps to support customers in the fulfillment process.
4. Three rules:
a. When something becomes personal, it becomes important.
b. When it’s everybody’s business, it’s nobody’s business.
c. Money is important.
5. Prorate sales compensation based on meeting target dates for achievement sales fulfillment. Each subsequent day needed to meet a key date reduces payment. You’ll get 100-percent compliance within weeks.
6. Consider the same for customers. A builder was having problems with buyers completing documents and fulfilling required actions. He created an incentive certificate for design center options and dates. If all occurred on time, fully complete, the entire incentive was awarded at closing. If segments are not completed, the incentive began to decline.
7. It is legitimate to ask, “Why should we have to do this? Pay people, especially employees, to do what they should be doing in the first place?” The answer: “We shouldn’t, but we do, and it works.”

Cory Munson
Grand Haven Homes, Austin, Texas 

Having strong relationships with buyers for a long period, sometimes up to eight or nine months, can be very challenging. Setting expectations up front with buyers is critical. If the sales person spends time reviewing deadlines and stressing the importance for the buyer to meet each one, the process goes smoother. This takes more time during the contracting phase, because the sales person needs to go over the entire list of options available and which changes cannot be made after a certain date. The sales staff should contact each buyer a few days before the cut-off date, remind the buyer what is expected of them by then, and never get caught having to explain that an option cannot be added after the cut-off date. It takes commitment and discipline to make this process happen.

There is a management technique—perhaps more of a life technique—that says whenever you describe a problem, a pain, a difficulty, a failure, ask, “Why?” five times. When your salespeople don’t submit their paperwork complete and on-time, ask the five whys. When the start packages and POs go out with errors, five more whys. When your customers fail to make their decision dates, still another five whys. Keep that up and the deeper issues will become clear. That is actually the hard part, facing the brutal facts and being both individually and organizationally honest. Once you’ve done that, a clearer path emerges. All that’s left now is hard work, happy customers, and greater profit. PB

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10/24/2013 Selling To Women Home Buyers

Compared with men, women have a different approach to the process of purchasing a home and, in many cases, ultimately decide which house to buy.

Bob Schultz, Contributing Editor



October 24, 2013

To be a consistently high-performing new-home sales professional, you must be able to adapt to and connect with all of your potential buyers. As an expert on the new-home sales process, and in writing about marketing and selling to the female buyer, I decided to do what Dr. Stephen Covey recommends in his book, The Seven Habits Of Highly Successful People, which is to seek first to understand, then to be understood. I asked one of the most successful and professional women in new-home sales I know, whose expertise has been proven in the trenches what matters when selling to women buyers. Here is what Michelle Moore has to tell us.

Always having a planned, not canned, presentation prepares you for any surprises in the sales process. This recommendation reminds me of a saying I heard years ago: Proper planning prevents poor performance. Due to the high percentage of women making the home-buying decisions, a planned presentation must include details that are important to women. In fact, studies show that seven out of eight women will go out of their way to do business with companies that market to women. As you can see, the skill of selling to women isn't just nice to know; you need to know it.

The biggest purchase most people ever make is their home. In a recent article, Marti Barletta, author of Marketing to Women: How to Increase Your Share of the World's Largest Market, credits women with 80 to 85 percent of spending decisions. Sure, we know that men have some say in a couple's decision to buy a home, but when you look into  what their contribution is specifically, I think you'll agree it's very little.

Men often have a different approach than women when it comes to the process of purchasing. Men focus on a need and create a process to reach their buying decision, while women consider their relationship with their Realtor to be one of the more important factors in helping them to decide. Aspects such as appearance, reputation, respect, trust, eye contact, and how much you listen (or don't) can make or break the deal for them.
From a woman's perspective, some negative perceptions of men selling to women include a lack of manners, poor listening skills, and being aggressive, pushy, high pressure, overbearing, condescending, and devious.

Likewise, some negative perceptions of women selling to other women include a lack of technical and product knowledge, being emotional, tentative, uncertain, vague, unsure of specifics, unable to make a sound recommendation, and unable to get to the bottom line.
But here's one very important point. Though women have a great deal of buying power, their decisions are not about picking a product that only they like. Ultimately, when a woman makes a buying decision, she has her entire family in mind.

So if you're wondering which points to cover in an effective sales presentation to a woman, here?s a list of four must-haves:

1. Display good business etiquette such as beginning with a friendly greeting. Include a firm handshake while introducing yourself and make eye contact. Generally speaking, women prefer more eye contact than men in the buying process.
2. Paint a picture by speaking to women about how your product is going to appeal to them as a mom, a wife, or a partner. Women are driven to make their own lives, and the lives of those they care about, better. Remember, features tell and benefits sell.
3. Be prepared to deliver a professional presentation full of details such as completion dates, available features, and color selections. As I have always said, the deal is in the details. Women are researchers looking for facts. They won't make purchasing decisions without obtaining all the facts required to make an informed decision.
4. Listen, listen, and listen some more. Superior customer service is linked highly with your ability to actively listen. Reflecting back on customers' needs throughout the entire sales process shows that you are listening, you care about their needs, and you are sincere.

Finally, through the years, I have heard many people talk about doing business by the Golden Rule, which is, Treat people as you want to be treated. That is good. But as you develop your skills in selling to women, I challenge you to live by the Platinum Rule. It simply states, Treat people as they'd like to be treated. If you can master the art of selling to women, you can take your sales numbers to levels you've never seen. PB

Michelle Moore has demonstrated her expertise and ability in the real estate and new-home sales arenas with more than 40 sales and leadership awards from the industry. Michelle travels the country as an inspirational speaker and leadership coach, and as an associate consultant, training facilitator, and coach with Bob Schultz & The New Home Specialists. Her newest book, ?Selling Simplified,? has just been published.

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9/20/2013 It's Not Easy (Or Cheap) Being Green

Selling energy-efficient systems requires a bit of comparative math to make the value and savings more tangible to potential home buyers.

Bob Schultz, Contributing Editor



September 20, 2013

Kermit the Frog had it right, especially for home builders.

?Being Green? means you have to build to higher standards, more often with higher costs. But the marketplace has not yet totally accepted these added upfront costs to a new home as being a great value.

What is energy efficiency, why do builders do it, and how can the benefits be presented so that all home buyers will consider it a necessity, rather than an expensive nice thing to have?

Let?s check some key words and phrases:

? Energy describes those resources such as petroleum, coal, gas, wind, nuclear fuel, and sunlight from which energy in the form of electricity, heat, etc., can be produced.
? Energy efficiency is simply the process of doing more with less. The goal is to accomplish the same tasks and functions as before while using less energy.
What?s the objective:
? To reduce energy required to regulate temperatures, run appliances, etc.
? To provide cost savings to customers
? To have customers experience useful benefits and perceive great value
? To reduce the world?s energy needs
 Why do it:
? To help control global emissions of greenhouse gases
? In many countries, energy efficiency is also seen to have national security benefits.
? It?s the right thing to do.

And how about this: It can help sell more new homes and remodeling contracts.

Since there are additional construction costs involved, make absolutely sure that you receive the economic benefit and ROI you deserve. To accomplish this objective, you must have a strategy in place and implement a consistent plan of action so that each potential buyer touches, feels, sees, and experiences the benefits and value they will gain by buying your energy-efficient home.

As the late actress, Mae West said, ?If you?ve got it, flaunt it.? Football legend Joe Namath said, ?It ain?t braggin? if you can back it up.?

You must present the benefits of your energy system in two formats.

How It'S Done 

Tap into your customer?s logical side by presenting benefits that are tangible, such as saving money. Stating a fact in the form of a rhetorical question, to which the only logical reply is ?yes? can get the point across and cause customers to experience that benefit on a conscious level. For example, ?In considering features of your brand new home, I would imagine that like for most people, saving money on energy bills would be of importance to you, is that correct?? Who is going to say, ?No??

Then involve their emotions by connecting with why energy efficiency matters. Another rhetorical question possibility: ?Won?t it be comforting to know that your children will be warm and cozy on a cold night??

Next, create a unique selling proposition. ?Although it?s not required by any building code, we provide you with (mention the energy-value feature(s) that you offer). Of course, this will (explain the benefits). I don?t know why all builders/remodelers don?t provide this feature, but we do it because we believe that when all things are considered, it?s the right thing to do.?

Here is where the rubber meets the road. Most new-home salespeople do a pretty good job of talking about the elements of the energy system. Typically they?ll say something like, ?This will save you 30 percent on your energy bills.? The problem is customers don?t walk around with a calculator so they can immediately crunch the numbers to figure what?s in it for them.

Here is how to drive that point home, every time: Make the savings meaningful, easy to understand, and real.

For example, if your energy-value package is estimated to save your customers 30 percent on their energy bills, that 30 percent figure on its own is rather nebulous until you convert that percentage to something tangible. Here?s how:

? Present the percentage savings as a monthly amount.
? Let?s assume that the estimated monthly cost for energy (heating, cooling, and lighting) for a home that is comparable in size to the product you are offering, but does not have any energy-saving systems, is approximately $500 a month at today?s cost of energy. The 30-percent savings in energy efficiency translates into a dollar savings of $150 per month?a sizeable number to be sure, but still not impactful enough.
? Now create the comparison. Take the $150 monthly savings and convert it to buying power. Explain that at today?s current rates (let?s say 4.5 percent for this example), it takes approximately $5 per month to pay off the interest and principal on each $1,000 of mortgage money borrowed on a 30-year loan.
? Here is where you can turn that 30-percent figure into buying power. In your head, you can estimate as follows. Each $5 per month will pay off approximately $1,000 of borrowed money. Also, you are showing an approximate monthly savings as a part of their total cost of ownership in energy savings of $150 monthly. Divide that $150 by $5, and for each $1,000 of mortgage money you get 30, which represents $30,000 of mortgage money not being borrowed. To validate, use Google search to find any amortization table and plug in the $30,000 mortgage amount at 4.5 percent interest for 30 years. The answer will show a monthly payment of approximately $150.

The conclusion?what they are saving monthly (real cash now) as a result of your energy package?would provide them with, on average, $30,000 of buying power over the life of the mortgage. This figure will make any older resale they might be considering at a lower price seem like much less of a bargain.

Let?s face it, if it were ?easy being green and selling it to the marketplace?, everyone would be doing it. They might not be able to do so, but you certainly can.

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