Tag: Restoration

  • Xactimate 2026 Labor Efficiency Models: Why Verisk Added the Large Restoration/Remodel Tier

    Xactimate 2026 Labor Efficiency Models: Why Verisk Added the Large Restoration/Remodel Tier

    One of the most consequential Xactimate updates in recent years arrived in February 2026: Verisk expanded the labor efficiency architecture from two models to three. The new Large Restoration/Remodel option fills a long-acknowledged gap between service-level work and full rebuild scenarios. For restoration operators handling mid-sized losses, the change is meaningful — and using the wrong model is a fast way to mis-price the labor on a job.

    This article assumes you understand how Xactimate fits into the broader pricing workflow. For that context, start with our restoration pricing and estimating master guide.

    The Old Two-Model Architecture

    Before the February 2026 update, Xactimate offered two labor efficiency models: a service-level model for small-scope, single-trade work and a restoration/remodel model for larger rebuilds. The two-tier architecture worked well at the extremes but struggled in the middle.

    Mid-sized restoration jobs — partial kitchen rebuilds after water loss, multi-room fire cleanup, large mold remediation projects — did not align cleanly with either model. Estimators routinely made judgment calls or layered manual workarounds to bridge the gap. The result was inconsistent labor pricing across similar jobs, depending on which estimator built the estimate.

    What the New Three-Model Architecture Looks Like

    The 2026 update keeps the existing service-level and restoration/remodel models and adds a third tier — Large Restoration/Remodel — designed for mid-sized work that involves multiple trades, longer durations, and more complex coordination than a service-level job, but does not reach the scale of a full rebuild.

    The practical effect is that estimators now have a defensible, system-supported choice for the work that previously required manual workarounds. This produces more consistent labor pricing across a portfolio of jobs and reduces the audit exposure that comes from improvised efficiency selections.

    How to Choose Between the Three Models

    The right model selection depends on job characteristics. Verisk’s documentation provides detailed selection criteria, but the field-level shorthand most experienced estimators use looks like this:

    • Service-level — single-trade, short-duration, minimal coordination, typical small water mitigation or single-room work
    • Large Restoration/Remodel — multi-trade, multi-week duration, moderate coordination, mid-sized fire/water/mold or partial rebuild
    • Restoration/Remodel — full rebuild scope, long duration, full general contracting coordination, large losses

    The Large Restoration/Remodel tier is the one most likely to be under-used initially because it is new and unfamiliar. Operators should review recent estimates that fell awkwardly between the two prior models and identify which would now fit the new tier.

    Why Labor Efficiency Matters for Margin

    Labor efficiency in Xactimate is not a discount or a multiplier — it is a coefficient that adjusts labor hours based on the type of work being performed. The same line item carries different labor hours under different efficiency models, because a service-level repair really does take less coordination overhead than a large rebuild.

    Selecting the wrong efficiency model on a job can shift the estimated labor by 10 to 25 percent, which is the difference between a profitable job and a job that loses money on labor underestimation.

    How TPAs Are Adopting the New Model

    TPA programs typically take a quarter or two to fully integrate new Xactimate methodology updates into their audit and review workflows. During the transition, expect inconsistency across reviewers — some will accept Large Restoration/Remodel selections without question, others will challenge them. Documenting the reasoning for the model selection in the estimate notes is the best defense.

    What to Update in Your Estimating Process

    Three things to update now that the three-model architecture is live: estimating templates should include the new Large Restoration/Remodel option as a standard selection for qualifying scopes, training materials should be refreshed to cover when to use each tier, and audit checklists should include a labor efficiency model review as a standard line item.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What changed in Xactimate’s 2026 labor efficiency update?

    Verisk expanded the labor efficiency architecture from two models to three by adding the Large Restoration/Remodel option. The update was presented in February 2026 and is designed to bridge the gap between service-level work and full rebuild scenarios for mid-sized restoration jobs.

    When should I use the Large Restoration/Remodel labor efficiency model?

    Use it for mid-sized jobs that involve multiple trades, multi-week duration, and moderate coordination but do not reach the scale of a full rebuild. Common examples include partial kitchen rebuilds after water loss, multi-room fire cleanup, and large mold remediation projects.

    How much can the wrong labor efficiency model affect my estimate?

    Selecting the wrong efficiency model can shift the estimated labor on a job by roughly 10 to 25 percent depending on the scope. On a $30,000 estimate, that is $3,000 to $7,500 of labor either over- or under-stated. The model choice is a meaningful margin lever, not a minor technical detail.

    Do TPAs accept the new Large Restoration/Remodel model?

    Yes, but adoption is uneven during the early months after the release. Some reviewers accept the new tier without question, others challenge it. The best practice is to document the reasoning for the model selection in the estimate notes so the choice is defensible if questioned.

    Where can I learn more about the 2026 Xactimate labor efficiency update?

    Verisk has published webinar content covering the updated labor efficiencies architecture in detail. The on-demand webinar is the authoritative source for the methodology and selection criteria. Operator-level training providers have also begun including the new tier in their X1 curricula.


  • Residential Restoration Lead Generation: The Channel Mix That Works

    Residential Restoration Lead Generation: The Channel Mix That Works

    Residential restoration lead generation runs on a different operating system than commercial. The buying decision is fast, the buyer is emotional, the decision criteria are weighted heavily toward speed and trust, and the lead source mix is dominated by Google in nearly every metro. Companies that get residential right build predictable, high-volume pipelines; companies that try to use commercial tactics on residential prospects consistently underperform.

    This article is part of our restoration lead generation master guide, which sits above this piece in the cluster architecture.

    The Residential Restoration Buyer

    The typical residential restoration buyer is a homeowner facing an active loss — a burst pipe, a roof leak after a storm, smoke after a kitchen fire, mold discovered during a remodel. They are usually researching for the first time, anxious, and operating under time pressure. They will call 1-3 companies, often the first ones to appear, and pick the company that responds fastest with the most credibility.

    The lead-gen implication is that visibility at the moment of search and credibility on first contact matter more than almost anything else.

    The Six Channels That Drive Residential Restoration Leads

    1. Google Search (Organic + Paid)

    Google Search dominates residential restoration lead generation in most metros. Organic rankings on “[service] [city]” queries, Google Ads on emergency intent terms, and a strong Google Business Profile collectively account for the majority of inbound residential lead volume for most well-marketed companies.

    2. Google Local Service Ads

    LSAs sit above traditional paid search and produce leads on a per-lead basis with the Google Guaranteed badge. For verified restoration companies, LSAs are typically the lowest cost per qualified lead channel in residential.

    3. Lead-Buying Platforms

    HomeAdvisor, Angi, Networx, and restoration-specific lead vendors fill capacity gaps but require operational discipline. They work best as a supplemental channel rather than a primary one.

    4. Plumber and Adjuster Referrals

    Offline referrals from plumbers, adjusters, real estate agents, and past customers produce the highest-margin and highest-converting residential leads in most operations. The investment cycle is long but the ROI is durable.

    5. Social Media (Paid)

    Paid Facebook and Instagram ads targeting homeowners by zip code with educational creative around water damage prevention and storm preparation produce both top-of-funnel awareness and direct lead form fills in most markets.

    6. Direct Mail and Local Print

    Often dismissed but still effective in some markets, particularly post-storm targeting in affected zip codes and ongoing presence in neighborhood publications and HOA newsletters.

    Channel Sequencing for a New Restoration Company

    For a residential restoration company starting from zero, the channel build order that consistently works: complete GBP optimization first (free, foundational), apply for and complete LSA verification next (lowest cost per lead once approved), launch tightly scoped Google Ads on emergency keywords, build out service and city pages for organic SEO, layer in paid social as budget allows, then test lead vendors with small pilots.

    Budget Allocation by Revenue Stage

    Companies under $500K in revenue should concentrate marketing budget heavily into LSAs and one tightly run Google Ads campaign. Diversification too early dilutes effort. Companies between $500K and $2M can add organic content investment and lead vendors. Companies above $2M can run the full channel mix simultaneously.

    Speed-to-Lead and Conversion Operations

    The lead generation channel mix only matters if the operations behind it convert leads. Residential restoration close rates are heavily influenced by speed of first contact, after-hours coverage, dispatch quality, and the in-home estimate experience. Companies that buy leads but cannot answer the phone within 60 seconds during business hours should fix operations before scaling lead spend.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the highest-ROI lead source for residential restoration?

    For verified restoration companies, Google Local Service Ads typically produce the lowest cost per qualified lead. Plumber and adjuster referrals produce the highest-margin leads but take longer to build. Most healthy residential operations run both alongside organic search and paid search.

    How much should a residential restoration company spend on marketing?

    Most healthy residential restoration companies invest 6-12% of revenue on marketing, with newer companies often spending toward the higher end of that range while organic and referral channels are still maturing.

    Are direct mail and local print still effective for restoration?

    Direct mail and hyperlocal print can produce results in specific scenarios — post-storm zip code targeting, neighborhood publications in affluent areas, HOA newsletters in target communities. Broad-based direct mail without targeting precision usually underperforms digital channels.

    Should I focus on water damage, fire damage, or mold for residential lead generation?

    Most residential restoration revenue comes from water damage in nearly every market, with fire and mold producing supplemental volume. Lead generation budget should generally be weighted toward water damage in proportion to its share of total revenue, with smaller dedicated budgets for fire and mold to maintain pipeline.

    How do I know when to add a new lead-gen channel?

    Add a new channel when existing channels have hit their cost-per-lead efficiency ceiling — meaning increased spending on the channel produces diminishing returns. Adding channels too early dilutes attention; adding too late caps growth. Quarterly channel performance reviews usually surface the right timing.


  • Commercial Restoration Sales Process: From Cold to MSA

    Commercial Restoration Sales Process: From Cold to MSA

    Commercial restoration sales is one of the longest, most complex sales motions in the trades. The buying committee can include property managers, asset managers, risk managers, in-house counsel, and procurement. The sales cycle routinely runs 6-18 months from first conversation to first revenue. The deal structures involve MSAs, performance metrics, insurance requirements, and pricing concessions that residential salespeople have never encountered. Companies that try to “sell harder” usually fail; companies that build a disciplined commercial sales process consistently win.

    This article is part of our broader restoration sales playbook, which covers the full sales motion across both commercial and residential.

    The Six Stages of a Commercial Restoration Sales Cycle

    Stage 1: Account Identification and Prospecting

    Commercial restoration prospecting starts with identifying the right accounts — typically property management firms managing 50+ doors in the service area, large commercial buildings, hospital systems, school districts, hotel chains, and corporate campuses. Tools like LoopNet, CoStar, and local commercial real estate databases combined with LinkedIn Sales Navigator surface the buying contacts inside each account.

    The activity goal at this stage is consistent outreach volume — typically 20-40 personalized touches per week per BD rep across email, LinkedIn, and phone.

    Stage 2: Discovery and Qualification

    The first real conversation with a commercial prospect should be discovery, not pitching. Questions to surface in discovery: current vendor relationships, recent loss history, decision-making process, MSA timelines, performance metrics they care about, and pain points with current vendors. Most commercial prospects are not actively looking for a new vendor — qualification is identifying the ones whose current arrangement has friction.

    Stage 3: Capability Presentation

    The capability presentation in commercial restoration sales is not a generic pitch deck. It is a tailored response to the specific pain points surfaced in discovery — response time guarantees, equipment inventory in their geography, certifications relevant to their property type, sample reporting and documentation, and case studies from similar properties.

    Stage 4: Pilot or Trial Engagement

    Commercial prospects rarely move directly from capability presentation to MSA. The intermediate step that moves deals forward is a pilot engagement — a small initial job that demonstrates the company’s actual performance under field conditions. Companies that nail the pilot consistently move to MSA negotiation; companies that disappoint on the pilot lose the account permanently.

    Stage 5: MSA Negotiation

    MSA negotiation involves pricing schedules, response time commitments, performance metrics, insurance requirements, indemnification, dispute resolution, term and termination, and exclusivity provisions. Most restoration companies need legal counsel for MSA review. The negotiation cycle commonly runs 60-180 days.

    Stage 6: Account Expansion

    The largest revenue from commercial accounts often comes after the initial MSA — through portfolio expansion (more properties), service expansion (mitigation plus reconstruction plus contents plus mold), and referrals to sister property management companies in the same network. The post-MSA account management motion is where commercial restoration revenue actually compounds.

    Sales Cycle Math

    A commercial restoration BD rep needs to manage the front-end activity volume that produces enough qualified pipeline 6-18 months out to support a steady stream of MSA closes. Most rep performance issues in commercial restoration are caused by insufficient prospecting volume in months 1-6, which produces a pipeline gap in months 7-18 that no amount of late-cycle effort can recover.

    Compensation Structure

    Commercial restoration BD compensation typically combines a base salary that supports the long sales cycle with commission on closed MSAs and a smaller residual on account revenue over time. Pure-commission structures usually fail because the cycle is too long for reps to survive financially during the ramp.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How long is the typical commercial restoration sales cycle?

    From first contact to first revenue, commercial restoration sales cycles typically run 6-18 months. From first contact to a fully executed MSA, the cycle can be 12-24 months. Pipeline planning needs to account for this extended timeline.

    Can a residential restoration salesperson succeed in commercial?

    The skill profiles are different enough that direct transitions usually fail. Commercial sales requires patience, account-based discipline, comfort with long cycles, and ability to navigate buying committees. Most successful commercial reps come from B2B service sales backgrounds rather than residential restoration sales backgrounds.

    What is the most common commercial restoration sales mistake?

    Pitching too early in the conversation. Commercial buyers tune out generic capability pitches; they engage with reps who clearly understand their specific property type, current vendor pain points, and operational reality. Discovery first, presentation second.

    How do I get my first commercial MSA?

    The fastest path is usually delivering exceptional performance on a pilot engagement with a smaller commercial account, then leveraging that success into introductions and case studies for larger targets. Cold-pitching a major property management firm without any commercial track record rarely works.

    What pricing concessions are typical in commercial MSAs?

    Commercial MSA pricing is typically 5-20% below standard residential pricing in exchange for volume guarantees and vendor preference. The exact concession depends on portfolio size, exclusivity terms, and the operator’s negotiating position. Companies entering commercial often over-discount in early MSAs to win business.


  • Residential Restoration Sales Scripts That Actually Close Jobs

    Residential Restoration Sales Scripts That Actually Close Jobs

    Residential restoration sales is won or lost in the first 60 seconds of the inbound call and the first 15 minutes of the in-home estimate. Companies that script these moments tightly close at meaningfully higher rates than companies that wing it. This article walks through the call flow, in-home conversation, and closing language that consistently performs in residential restoration sales operations.

    This is part of our restoration sales playbook, which covers the full sales motion.

    The Inbound Phone Call

    The inbound call is the highest-leverage 3-5 minutes in residential restoration. The script needs to accomplish four things quickly: establish empathy and credibility, qualify the situation, create urgency and book the appointment, and prevent the prospect from continuing to call competitors.

    The opening should never be “Hi, can I help you?” — it should be a confident, warm greeting that immediately signals competence: “[Company], this is [Name], how can I help you with your water damage today?”

    The qualification questions are simple but specific: What is the source of the water? When did it start? How much area is affected? Is the water still active? Is anyone home? What city are you in? These questions both qualify the lead and demonstrate competence to the homeowner.

    The booking close: “We can have a project manager on-site in [time]. Can I confirm the address?” — and then the critical ask: “Just so I can let our PM know, are you also calling other companies, or did you decide to go with us?” This last question, asked warmly and without pressure, reduces shopping behavior dramatically.

    The In-Home Arrival

    The first 60 seconds on-site set the tone for the entire conversation. The sequence that works: introduce yourself, ask permission to enter, ask the homeowner to walk you through what happened in their own words (don’t immediately start inspecting), then transition into a guided inspection together. Skipping the homeowner’s narrative is a common mistake — they need to feel heard before they will trust the recommendation.

    The Inspection Walk-Through

    Educational narration during the inspection separates restoration sales pros from amateurs. Rather than silently using a moisture meter, the rep should narrate what the readings mean, what category of water it appears to be, what equipment will be needed, and what the timeline looks like. This builds confidence and pre-frames the price.

    Presenting the Scope and Price

    The scope presentation should happen at the kitchen table, not standing up. The rep should walk through the scope line by line, explain why each item is necessary, address insurance process clearly, and then present the total — without flinching and without immediately offering a discount. The number is the number.

    Common price language that works: “Based on what we found, the scope to dry your home down properly comes to [amount]. Most of this will be covered by your insurance policy, and we’ll work directly with your adjuster on the supplements. The out-of-pocket exposure for you depends on your deductible. Does that match what you were expecting?”

    Handling the “Let Me Think About It”

    The most common objection in residential restoration is the soft delay: “Let me think about it” or “I need to talk to my spouse.” The script that works addresses the underlying concern without applying pressure: “Of course. The one thing I’d mention is that the longer we wait to start drying, the more secondary damage typically occurs. We can have equipment in place today and you can still cancel within 24 hours if you change your mind. What works better for you?”

    The Authorization Close

    The work authorization signature is the actual close. The handoff language: “Let me get this paperwork started — it just authorizes us to begin the mitigation and lets us bill your insurance directly.” Smooth, confident, and assumes the close. Hesitant closing language (“So… do you want to do this?”) signals uncertainty and triggers second-guessing.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Should restoration salespeople use a written script verbatim?

    The framework should be scripted; the delivery should be conversational. Reading a script word-for-word feels robotic and erodes trust. Memorizing the structure and language patterns and delivering them naturally is the goal.

    How do I train new restoration salespeople on these scripts?

    Role-play is the fastest training method. Pair new reps with senior staff for ride-alongs, then run weekly role-play sessions where new reps practice handling the toughest objections. Recording actual customer calls (with consent) and reviewing them as a team also accelerates learning.

    What is a reasonable close rate on residential restoration estimates?

    Well-trained residential restoration salespeople running emergency mitigation typically close 60-80% of first-on-scene appointments. Reconstruction-only estimates close at much lower rates, often 25-40%, because of the longer decision cycle.

    Should I quote prices over the phone?

    Generally no for restoration. Phone pricing without seeing the damage triggers price shopping and locks the rep into a number that may not match the actual scope. The phone goal is to book the on-site appointment, not to quote.

    How do I handle a homeowner who is getting multiple bids?

    Address the underlying concern (they want to make sure they’re not being overcharged) by walking through your scope line-by-line, explaining what each item does, and offering to review competitor scopes side-by-side. Confidence in your scope and price usually wins more often than discounting.


  • Starting and Scaling a Restoration Company: The Founder’s Guide

    Starting and Scaling a Restoration Company: The Founder’s Guide

    Starting a restoration company is easier than most people think. Scaling one past $2M in revenue is harder than almost anyone admits. The same instincts that get a founder from zero to one truck — hustle, personal customer service, doing whatever it takes — actively block growth past the first ceiling.

    This is the complete founder’s guide for 2026: what it actually costs to start, what licenses and certifications you need, the staffing path, the revenue milestones where the operating model has to change, and the operational shifts that separate restoration companies that scale from the ones that stay stuck at the same revenue line for a decade.

    The honest startup math

    Realistic capital required to launch a one-truck residential restoration company in 2026: $50,000-$120,000. The breakdown: equipment package (dehumidifiers, air movers, HEPA filters, moisture meters, basic tools) $20,000-$40,000; truck (used cargo van or box truck, lettered) $25,000-$45,000; insurance (general liability, auto, workers’ comp, pollution liability) $8,000-$15,000 first-year; licensing and certifications (state contractor license, IICRC WRT for the founder, business setup) $2,000-$5,000; software (Xactimate subscription, basic CRM, accounting) $3,000-$6,000 first-year; working capital reserve to bridge first 90 days of receivables $15,000-$30,000.

    Companies that try to start under $40K usually run into cash crisis within six months when insurance receivables stretch beyond 60 days and equipment fails. Companies that overcapitalize at $200K+ often do it by buying gear they don’t need yet.

    Legal structure and licensing

    Most restoration companies form as LLCs (limited liability companies) for the liability protection and tax flexibility. S-corp election is common as revenue grows past the $250K mark for tax efficiency. A handful of larger operators are structured as full C-corps, particularly those planning institutional capital or eventual sale.

    Licensing requirements vary dramatically by state. State contractor licenses are required in most states for general restoration work, often at multiple levels (residential, commercial, mold, etc.). Mold remediation licenses are required in Florida, Texas, New York, Louisiana, and several other states. Asbestos and lead certifications are federal (EPA RRP) and required for renovation in pre-1978 housing. Biohazard or trauma cleanup licensing is regulated state-by-state. The first task for any new operator is a clean inventory of what licenses are required in your state and county.

    The certifications you need before you take the first job

    Minimum credentials before opening for residential mitigation: IICRC WRT for the founder (and any other technician), state contractor license, EPA RRP certification if any reconstruction work involves pre-1978 properties, OSHA 10 for all personnel. Add AMRT before any mold work, FSRT before any fire work. Add general liability insurance with at least $1M per-occurrence and $2M aggregate; pollution liability with at least $1M; workers’ comp for every employee; commercial auto with full coverage on the truck.

    The five revenue milestones (and what changes at each)

    Restoration companies hit predictable plateaus. The five milestones and the operational shifts they require:

    $0-$500K (the founder phase). The founder does everything: sales, estimating, production, billing, collections. The operating model is “the founder’s calendar.” Limit: the founder’s hours.

    $500K-$1.5M (the first hire phase). The founder hires a lead technician and a part-time office or bookkeeper. The operating model becomes “founder + small team.” Limit: the founder is still the only salesperson and project manager. Burnout is the most common reason companies stall here.

    $1.5M-$3M (the systems phase). The first dedicated salesperson and a project manager are hired. The founder transitions from doing the work to designing the work. CRM and job management software become essential. Cash management discipline becomes critical because receivables grow faster than cash. Most companies that fail to scale fail here because the founder won’t let go of the work.

    $3M-$8M (the multi-truck operation). Multiple production crews, dedicated estimating, formal sales team, in-house training program, controller-level financial oversight. The founder’s job is now strategic — sales leadership, key accounts, growth planning, hiring. Operating model is “leadership team runs the business.”

    $8M+ (multi-location or large single-location). Either geographic expansion to additional locations or vertical depth in commercial and large loss work. CFO, dedicated marketing leader, regional managers. Founder transitions to CEO role or owner-investor role.

    The hiring sequence that works

    The proven hiring sequence for a growing restoration company: first hire, lead technician (so the founder can stop being the only field person); second hire, office administrator or bookkeeper (to handle the receivables and paperwork chaos); third hire, second technician (capacity to run two crews); fourth hire, project manager or estimator (separate the field execution from the field estimating); fifth hire, salesperson (the founder stops being the only salesperson); sixth hire, second salesperson or production manager (depending on growth direction); seventh+, controller, marketing manager, additional crews, dedicated commercial account manager.

    The financial discipline most founders skip

    The financial systems that have to be in place before $1.5M revenue: monthly P&L review (not just bank balance), aged receivables report (you cannot manage what you don’t measure — and restoration receivables stretch), job costing per project (revenue minus actual costs by job), cash flow forecast looking 90 days out, annual budget with monthly tracking. Companies that scale without these systems usually crash on cash management even when they’re profitable on paper.

    The exit options worth knowing

    Restoration companies have several viable exit paths. Strategic acquisition by a larger restoration company or franchise group (BluSky, ServiceMaster, ATI, BELFOR, and various PE-backed roll-ups have been active acquirers). Private equity for larger operators (typically $10M+ revenue with strong commercial mix). Internal sale to existing management (with seller financing common). Family transition to children or family members. Typical valuation multiples have been 3-6x adjusted EBITDA depending on size, growth, customer concentration, and commercial mix percentage.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much does it cost to start a restoration business?

    A realistic startup cost for a one-truck residential restoration company in 2026 ranges from $50,000 to $120,000. The major components are equipment ($20K-$40K), a truck ($25K-$45K), insurance ($8K-$15K first year), licensing and certifications ($2K-$5K), software ($3K-$6K), and working capital to bridge initial receivables ($15K-$30K).

    How do you start a restoration business?

    The compressed startup checklist: form an LLC, obtain state contractor license, secure general liability and pollution liability insurance plus workers’ comp and commercial auto, complete IICRC WRT certification at minimum, purchase initial equipment package and a service vehicle, set up Xactimate subscription and basic accounting software, build initial referral relationships with local plumbers and insurance agents, establish a Google Business Profile and basic website, and begin marketing through Local Service Ads and direct outreach.

    How profitable is a restoration business?

    Healthy restoration companies run 8-15% net profit margin on revenue. Gross margins by service line range from 25-40% on reconstruction up to 50-65% on mold remediation. A well-run $2M restoration company should produce $160K-$300K in net profit. The most profitable operators tend to have strong commercial mix, disciplined supplement workflows, and tight job costing.

    What is the average revenue of a restoration company?

    Restoration company revenue ranges enormously. Single-truck residential operators typically run $400K-$1.2M. Established multi-truck residential companies $1.5M-$5M. Companies with significant commercial work or multiple service lines $5M-$25M. Multi-location operators and franchises $25M-$300M+. The industry median is around $1.5M-$2M.

    How long does it take to scale a restoration company?

    The typical path from startup to $5M revenue runs 5-10 years for organic growth. Faster growth is possible through acquisition, geographic expansion, or aggressive commercial business development. The most common stalling point is the $1.5M-$2M range, where the founder has to transition from doing the work to leading the team. Companies that successfully make that transition often double again in the following 3-5 years.

    Can you franchise a restoration business?

    Yes, the major restoration franchise groups (ServPro, ServiceMaster, BELFOR, Rainbow International, PuroClean, and others) all sell franchise territories. Franchise costs vary widely: initial franchise fees typically $40K-$75K, equipment and startup costs $100K-$300K, and ongoing royalties of 6-10% of revenue plus marketing fees. The franchise vs. independent decision depends on access to commercial work, brand recognition value in your market, and tolerance for ongoing royalty cost.


  • Building a Restoration Sales Team: Hiring, Training, and Retention

    Building a Restoration Sales Team: Hiring, Training, and Retention

    The transition from owner-led selling to a professional sales team is the hardest organizational shift in a growing restoration company. The owner’s selling style is usually charisma-driven and unsystematized; replacing it with reps who sell consistently requires building a hiring profile, training program, compensation plan, and management cadence that the company has never had. Most restoration companies stall at this transition; the ones that get through it are the ones that scale to $10M+.

    This article is part of our restoration sales playbook.

    The Hiring Profile

    The two profiles that consistently work in residential restoration sales are former in-home services salespeople (HVAC, roofing, solar, pest) and former restoration project managers with strong customer-facing skills. Pure traditional B2B salespeople usually struggle with the in-home dynamic. Restoration technicians sometimes succeed in sales but more often fail because the skill profile is different.

    For commercial restoration BD, the profile shifts toward B2B service sales backgrounds — commercial real estate, facility services, commercial insurance, or B2B SaaS reps with patience for long cycles.

    Sourcing Sales Talent

    The best sourcing channels for restoration sales talent are LinkedIn outreach to in-home services reps in adjacent industries, employee referrals (current sales reps know other sales reps), and industry events. Indeed and ZipRecruiter produce volume but quality is mixed. Recruiting agencies focused on home services sales can accelerate the process for an investment.

    The Training Program

    The minimum viable training program for a new restoration salesperson includes: 1-2 weeks of ride-along with senior reps observing real calls, role-play sessions covering the inbound script and in-home flow, technical product training on water/fire/mold processes (enough to be credible, not enough to be a technician), CRM and operations training, and a defined ramp period of 60-90 days before full quota.

    Companies that throw new reps into the field without structured training see attrition rates above 50% in year one. Companies with structured 60-90 day onboarding typically see attrition under 20%.

    Compensation Structures That Work

    Residential restoration salesperson compensation typically combines a modest base salary ($40K-$60K depending on metro and experience) with commission on closed revenue (often 5-12% on mitigation, lower on reconstruction). Some operations use sliding commission scales that reward higher gross margin work and disincentivize discounting.

    Commercial BD compensation usually pairs a higher base salary ($65K-$100K) with smaller commission on closed MSAs and a residual on account revenue. The longer cycle requires the higher base.

    Structures that consistently fail: pure 100% commission (drives short-term behavior and high attrition), salary-only (no upside, attracts the wrong profile), and commission tied only to revenue without any margin or quality metric (produces discounting and bad customer outcomes).

    Sales Management Cadence

    The management cadence that works includes: daily team huddle reviewing yesterday’s appointments and today’s pipeline, weekly one-on-one with each rep covering pipeline, deal coaching, and personal development, weekly team meeting reviewing key metrics (close rate, average ticket, lead source performance), and monthly business review including compensation reconciliation and quota adjustments.

    Retention Practices

    Restoration sales rep retention is driven primarily by income predictability, leadership quality, and operational support (good leads, fast estimating tools, clean handoffs to production). Companies that retain reps long-term invest heavily in lead quality, operational efficiency, and middle-management capability — not just in higher commission rates.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When should a restoration company hire its first salesperson?

    Most restoration owners should add their first dedicated salesperson when their own selling capacity is becoming the growth constraint — typically when the company hits roughly $1.5M-$3M in revenue and the owner can no longer personally handle every estimate. Hiring earlier often means the owner has to manage someone they cannot afford; hiring later caps growth.

    How long does it take a new restoration salesperson to ramp?

    A well-onboarded residential rep usually reaches full productivity in 90-120 days. Commercial BD reps typically need 6-12 months to build the pipeline that produces consistent revenue. Companies that expect faster ramps usually see high attrition.

    Should we pay restoration salespeople on revenue or gross profit?

    Gross profit-based commission produces better behavioral outcomes (less discounting, better job selection) but requires accurate job costing that many restoration companies do not have. Revenue-based commission is simpler but creates incentive misalignment. Hybrid structures that adjust commission rate based on gross margin tier often work best.

    How do I prevent salespeople from over-promising on jobs?

    Strong handoff processes between sales and production, sales accountability for change orders and customer complaints, and compensation structures that include customer satisfaction or production margin metrics all reduce over-promising. Cultural emphasis from leadership on long-term reputation over short-term commission also matters.

    Do restoration sales contests actually work?

    Short-term contests can create useful spikes in activity (more appointments, faster follow-up) but should not replace consistent compensation structures. Contests that reward quality metrics (close rate, customer review scores) usually outperform contests that reward pure revenue.


  • Restoration Insurance Programs: TPAs, Carriers, and Vendor Networks

    Restoration Insurance Programs: TPAs, Carriers, and Vendor Networks

    The insurance ecosystem in restoration is its own universe with its own language: TPAs, carriers, preferred vendor programs, MSAs, scorecards, audits, performance guarantees, network certifications. Most restoration owners have a vague sense of what these programs are and a stronger opinion about whether to join them, often without knowing the actual economics.

    This is the complete operator’s guide to restoration insurance programs in 2026: what TPAs actually do, how carrier preferred vendor programs work, what MSAs require, the real margin economics, and the framework for deciding which programs deserve your application.

    The four players in the insurance restoration ecosystem

    Every insurance restoration job involves up to four parties. Understanding which is which is the first step to navigating the system.

    The carrier is the insurance company that issued the policy and pays the claim — State Farm, Allstate, USAA, Liberty Mutual, Travelers, Nationwide, Farmers, Progressive, Chubb, and dozens of regionals. Carriers either have in-house claims handling or contract claims management out to TPAs.

    The TPA (third-party administrator) is a company that manages claims on behalf of carriers — Sedgwick, Crawford & Company, Contractor Connection, Code Blue Restoration Services, CCMSI, ESIS, and others. TPAs handle adjuster assignments, vendor management, scope review, payment processing, and customer communication on behalf of the carrier.

    The vendor network is a managed roster of restoration contractors that the carrier or TPA assigns work to. Some networks are operated by TPAs (Contractor Connection is the largest); some are operated directly by carriers (Allstate Premier Service, USAA STARS).

    The independent adjuster is a contracted adjuster (not a carrier employee) hired to assess specific claims, often for catastrophe events or to supplement carrier capacity. Independents work for IA firms like Eberl, Pilot Catastrophe, and Crawford.

    What a TPA program actually requires

    Joining a major TPA vendor network typically requires: a multi-year track record in restoration (most require 3+ years), specific IICRC certifications (firm-level plus individual technicians for relevant service lines), insurance coverage at higher limits than standard (often $2M+ general liability, $1M+ pollution liability, $1M+ professional liability), background checks and drug testing for technicians, vehicle and uniform standards, technology compatibility (use of TPA-approved estimating and reporting platforms), 24/7 dispatch capability with documented response time SLAs, monthly reporting and KPI tracking, and a signed master service agreement that defines pricing, scope, performance standards, and termination conditions.

    The application process typically takes 60-180 days, includes facility audits, reference checks, and may require a probationary period of supervised job assignments before full network status.

    The pricing economics of TPA work

    The honest economics: TPA work pays less than direct retail work. Most TPA agreements include some form of pricing concession — typically 10-20% off published Xactimate pricing, restrictions on overhead and profit, capped supplements, or fee schedules that cap certain line items. The trade-off is volume and predictability: a vendor in good standing on a major TPA network may receive 30-100+ assignments per month depending on territory.

    The math that matters: net margin per TPA job, after pricing concessions, after the operational overhead of TPA-required reporting and SLAs, and after slower payment terms (45-90 days is common). Companies that profitably run TPA programs typically have lean overhead, disciplined estimating, and the operational scale to absorb the lower per-job margin with higher volume. Companies with high overhead burden often lose money on TPA jobs they think are profitable.

    Major TPAs and vendor programs to know

    Contractor Connection (subsidiary of Crawford & Company) is the largest restoration vendor network, managing claims for many major carriers including Allstate, Liberty Mutual, and others. Network membership is tightly managed with strict performance standards and capacity targets.

    Code Blue Restoration Services is a major restoration-specific TPA serving multiple carriers, with significant residential mitigation volume.

    Sedgwick is one of the largest TPAs overall, serving commercial and residential property claims for many major carriers. Sedgwick’s vendor network is more decentralized than Contractor Connection’s.

    Crawford & Company operates both adjusting services and Contractor Connection, with significant CAT (catastrophe) capacity.

    Allstate’s Premier Service Program is a direct-from-carrier preferred vendor program for water mitigation and reconstruction.

    USAA STARS is USAA’s preferred vendor program serving its policyholder base.

    State Farm Premier Service is State Farm’s similar program (formerly Service First).

    Numerous regional and specialized TPAs exist — Sedgwick CCMSI, Cunningham Lindsey (now Sedgwick), various large loss specialty firms, and carrier-specific direct programs.

    Master Service Agreements (MSAs)

    An MSA is the contract that governs the relationship between the contractor and the TPA or carrier. Key MSA terms to scrutinize: pricing schedule (Xactimate concession amount, capped line items, fee schedules); territory definition (geographic scope, exclusivity provisions, right of first refusal); performance metrics (response time SLAs, completion timelines, scorecard targets); payment terms (net days, retention, hold-back provisions); insurance and indemnification requirements; termination provisions (notice periods, performance-based termination, transition obligations); customer ownership (whether you can market to customers post-job, whether the carrier owns the customer relationship); audit rights (TPA rights to review your job files, scope, photos, and pricing).

    MSAs are negotiable in some areas (especially territory and performance metrics) and rarely negotiable in others (pricing concessions, audit rights). Operators should have an attorney with restoration industry experience review any MSA before signing.

    The decision framework: which programs to join

    Whether to join a TPA program depends on four factors. Operational capacity: do you have the SLA capability, technology stack, and management bandwidth to meet program requirements? Market lead flow: is your direct lead generation strong enough that you can be selective, or do you need TPA volume to fill the calendar? Cost structure: is your overhead lean enough to make money at the program’s pricing concessions? Strategic mix: what percentage of revenue comes from TPA programs vs. direct? Most healthy operators target 30-50% TPA revenue mix — enough volume to leverage operations, not so much that the company is captive to a single TPA’s decisions.

    How to win at TPA performance scorecards

    Once on a TPA network, performance metrics determine assignment volume. The metrics that matter on most scorecards: response time (minutes from assignment to first contact, hours to first on-site), customer satisfaction scores (post-job surveys), cycle time (days from assignment to job completion), scope variance (how often supplements are needed and whether they’re approved), complaint rate (formal customer complaints per 100 jobs), quality scores (file documentation, photo quality, scope accuracy on TPA audits). Top-quartile performers on these metrics receive disproportionate assignment volume; bottom-quartile performers get reduced assignments and eventual termination.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is a TPA in restoration?

    A TPA (third-party administrator) is a company that manages claims on behalf of insurance carriers. In restoration, TPAs handle adjuster assignment, vendor selection, scope review, payment processing, and customer communication. Major restoration TPAs include Sedgwick, Crawford & Company, Contractor Connection, Code Blue, and CCMSI.

    How do you get on a carrier preferred vendor program?

    The application process typically requires: 3+ years in business, specific IICRC firm and individual certifications, higher insurance limits than standard, background-checked technicians, 24/7 dispatch capability, monthly KPI reporting, and signing a master service agreement that defines pricing concessions and performance standards. Applications take 60-180 days and often include facility audits and reference checks.

    Are TPA programs profitable for restoration companies?

    It depends on cost structure. TPA work typically pays 10-20% less than direct retail work due to pricing concessions, capped overhead and profit, and other restrictions. Companies with lean overhead and high operational discipline can run profitable TPA programs at high volume. Companies with high overhead burden often lose money on TPA jobs while believing they’re profitable.

    What is an MSA in restoration?

    An MSA (Master Service Agreement) is the contract between a restoration contractor and a TPA, carrier, or commercial customer that governs the relationship — pricing schedules, territory, performance metrics, payment terms, insurance requirements, audit rights, and termination provisions. MSAs should be reviewed by an attorney with restoration industry experience before signing.

    What percentage of revenue should come from TPA work?

    Most healthy restoration operators target 30-50% of revenue from TPA and preferred vendor programs. Below that range, the company isn’t leveraging program volume; above that range, the company is operationally captive to a few TPAs and vulnerable to program changes, pricing reductions, or termination.

    How do restoration vendor scorecards work?

    TPA performance scorecards typically measure response time (minutes to first contact, hours to on-site), customer satisfaction scores, cycle time (days from assignment to completion), scope variance and supplement approval rates, complaint rates, and quality scores from TPA file audits. Top-quartile performers receive disproportionate assignment volume; bottom-quartile performers face reduced assignments and eventual network termination.


  • Restoration Sales Objection Handling: Field-Tested Responses

    Restoration Sales Objection Handling: Field-Tested Responses

    Restoration sales objections fall into a small number of repeating patterns. The same five or six concerns surface in nearly every estimate, and the difference between a 40% close rate and a 70% close rate is largely whether the rep has rehearsed responses to these objections or is improvising in the moment. This article walks through the objections that come up most often and the language that consistently moves the conversation forward.

    This article is part of our restoration sales playbook.

    Objection 1: “Your Price Is Too High”

    The price objection is rarely about price in isolation. It is usually about value clarity, comparison shopping, or insurance confusion. The response that works opens with curiosity, not defense: “Help me understand what you’re comparing it to” — then tailor the response to what surfaces.

    If the customer has a competitor quote, walk through the scope line by line and identify what is missing in the lower bid (almost always something is). If the customer is reacting to the absolute number, reframe around insurance: “Most of this will be covered. Your out-of-pocket exposure is your deductible. The rest is between us and the carrier.”

    Objection 2: “Let Me Think About It”

    The soft delay is the most common objection in residential restoration. It usually means the customer has unstated concerns. The response: “Of course. What’s the main thing you want to think through?” — then handle whatever surfaces. If they truly cannot articulate a concern, the urgency framing often works: “I understand. The main thing I’d mention is that the longer we wait to start drying, the more secondary damage typically occurs. We can have equipment running in two hours and you can still cancel within 24 hours if you change your mind.”

    Objection 3: “I Need to Talk to My Spouse”

    This is a legitimate concern that should not be steamrolled. The response: “That makes total sense. Is your spouse available to FaceTime now? I’m happy to walk them through what we found.” If FaceTime is not possible, schedule a specific follow-up time before leaving — never an open-ended “let me know.”

    Objection 4: “I’m Going to Wait and See if It Dries Out on Its Own”

    This is the most expensive customer mistake in restoration. The educational response: “That’s a fair instinct. The challenge is that what looks dry on the surface usually isn’t dry inside the wall cavities and subfloor. Within 48-72 hours, that hidden moisture typically grows mold, which becomes a much more expensive remediation later. Let me show you the moisture readings behind the drywall.” Then take a meter reading on camera.

    Objection 5: “My Insurance Won’t Cover This”

    Often the customer is wrong about coverage, and the response is education: “Most homeowner policies cover sudden water damage from internal sources — would you mind sharing what your adjuster has said specifically?” If coverage truly is denied, transition to discussing scope reduction or financing options.

    Objection 6: “I Don’t Trust You / I’ve Never Heard of Your Company”

    Trust objections are rarely stated this directly but often signal through hesitation, intense scrutiny, or refusal to sign authorization. The response is credibility evidence: review counts and links, BBB rating, IICRC certifications, years in business, photos of recent jobs in their neighborhood, and offers to provide references. The defensive response (“Why don’t you trust me?”) fails. The confident response with proof works.

    Objection 7: “Can You Give Me a Discount?”

    The response that protects margin: “I appreciate the ask, but our pricing is set based on what it actually costs to do this work properly. What I can do is walk through the scope and see if there are any line items you’d want to remove — though I’d advise against cutting any of the drying equipment because that’s where the secondary damage risk lives.” Discounting on demand trains customers to ask every time and eats margin across the entire customer base.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How many objections does a typical restoration estimate include?

    A typical residential restoration estimate includes 1-3 objections from the customer before signing. Estimates with zero objections often signal the customer is going to “think about it” silently and then go elsewhere — surfacing objections in the room is actually a sign of engagement.

    Should restoration salespeople memorize objection responses?

    Memorize the framework, not the words. Word-for-word memorized responses sound robotic. Practiced frameworks delivered conversationally land naturally and protect against improvisation under pressure.

    What is the most damaging objection-handling mistake?

    Discounting at the first hint of price resistance. The price objection is usually a value clarity question — answering it with a discount confirms that the original price was inflated and trains the customer to expect discounts on future work.

    How do I handle objections over the phone before the in-home visit?

    Most pricing and scope questions on the phone should be redirected to the in-home visit: “I want to give you an accurate answer, and the only way to do that is to actually see the damage. Can we get a project manager out today?” Quoting blind on the phone usually loses the job and the in-home opportunity simultaneously.

    When should I walk away from a customer rather than handle the objection?

    Walk away when the customer is asking for scope or pricing that compromises quality (e.g., “skip the dehumidifiers”), demanding discounts that put the job below cost, or signaling distrust that the rep cannot recover. Working unprofitable or unhappy customers damages the business.


  • Water Damage Restoration Marketing: A Complete Channel Guide

    Water Damage Restoration Marketing: A Complete Channel Guide

    Water damage restoration is unlike almost any other home service. The buying decision happens in minutes, not weeks. The customer is panicked, often dealing with an active leak or flood, and they will hire whoever shows up first with credibility. Marketing for water damage restoration is therefore less about persuasion and more about presence — being visible at the exact moment a homeowner or property manager opens their phone and types “water damage near me.”

    This guide covers the full channel stack that profitable water damage restoration companies use to capture that demand and build a referral engine that keeps producing between emergencies. For the broader strategic context, see our complete restoration marketing guide, which sits above this article in the hub-and-spoke architecture.

    Why Water Damage Marketing Is Different

    Three structural realities shape every marketing decision in this category. First, intent is overwhelmingly bottom-funnel. Almost no one searches “water damage restoration company” out of curiosity. They search because they have a problem. That collapses the funnel and rewards channels that intercept high-intent searches.

    Second, the competitive set is dominated by Google. Google Search, Google Maps, Local Service Ads, and Google Business Profile collectively account for the majority of net-new water damage leads in most metros. If a restoration company is not visible across all four, it is competing for table scraps.

    Third, insurance and TPA dynamics shape lead economics. A water damage job paid through a carrier preferred vendor program has a different margin profile than a cash retail job sourced from Google. Marketing has to be tuned to the mix the operator actually wants.

    The Five Channels That Drive Most Water Damage Leads

    1. Google Local Service Ads (LSAs)

    LSAs sit at the top of the search results page above traditional paid ads and the map pack. For water damage queries, LSAs produce leads at a cost per acquisition that is typically lower than Google Ads in most markets, though margins vary by metro. The Google Guaranteed badge is a meaningful conversion lever for cold homeowners. Setup requires background checks, license verification, and insurance documentation — friction that becomes a moat once cleared.

    2. Google Ads (Search)

    Traditional pay-per-click on emergency keywords (“water damage restoration,” “flooded basement,” “burst pipe cleanup”) remains the workhorse channel for most restoration companies. Campaign structure matters enormously here. Single-keyword ad groups, hyperlocal geo-targeting, call-only ads after hours, and aggressive negative keyword lists separate profitable accounts from money pits.

    3. Google Business Profile and the Map Pack

    Map pack visibility is essentially free traffic, but it is also the most competitive surface in local search. Ranking in the three-pack for “water damage restoration [city]” requires consistent NAP citations, a steady stream of authentic reviews with keyword-rich responses, regular GBP posts, geo-tagged photo uploads, and proximity to the searcher.

    4. Organic SEO and Content

    Organic search is a longer-term play but produces the cheapest leads at scale. Service pages targeting “[service] in [city]” combinations, neighborhood landing pages for high-value zip codes, and educational content answering insurance and restoration process questions all stack into a moat that competitors struggle to replicate.

    5. Insurance Adjuster and Plumber Referrals

    Marketing is not only digital. The most profitable restoration companies invest heavily in offline relationships with adjusters, plumbers, property managers, and real estate agents. A single plumber referral relationship can produce more revenue than a full year of paid search.

    Budget Allocation: Where to Put the First Marketing Dollar

    For a restoration company spending under $5,000 per month on marketing, the priority order is usually: GBP optimization first (it is free), then LSAs (lowest CAC for verified businesses), then a tightly scoped Google Ads campaign on emergency keywords, then organic content investment. Social media and display should generally come last in the water damage category because intent is too immediate for those channels to convert efficiently.

    For companies spending $10,000-$50,000 per month, the channel mix expands to include programmatic display for retargeting, YouTube for brand awareness in target zip codes, and a content marketing operation that produces 4-8 SEO-targeted pieces per month.

    Tracking and Attribution

    Water damage marketing fails when leads cannot be tracked back to source. Every campaign should use call tracking numbers (CallRail, CallTrackingMetrics, or WhatConverts), every form should fire a conversion event, and every job should be tagged in the CRM with its origin channel. Without this, marketing decisions are guesses.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much should a water damage restoration company spend on marketing?

    Most healthy restoration companies invest between 5% and 12% of revenue on marketing, with a higher share during the first three years while organic and referral channels are still being built. Companies relying primarily on paid acquisition often run closer to the higher end of that range.

    Are Google Local Service Ads worth it for water damage?

    For most water damage restoration companies in mid-sized and major metros, yes. LSAs typically produce a lower cost per lead than traditional Google Ads and the Google Guaranteed badge improves close rates on cold inbound calls. The qualifying process is the main barrier.

    What marketing channels work best for commercial water damage?

    Commercial water damage leans more on relationships, MSAs with property management firms, LinkedIn outreach, and association involvement than on paid search. Paid search still matters but a larger share of commercial pipeline comes from offline business development.

    How long does SEO take for a restoration company?

    Local SEO results — map pack visibility, branded search, and a handful of city service pages — typically begin to compound in 90-180 days. Building a competitive organic presence on the most valuable water damage keywords in a major metro often takes 12-24 months of consistent content and link building.

    Should a restoration company hire an agency or build marketing in-house?

    Companies under roughly $3M in revenue usually get more value from a specialized restoration marketing agency than from an in-house hire, because the talent pool of operators who understand both restoration and digital marketing is thin. Above $5M, an internal marketing leader paired with specialist agencies is often the best mix.


  • Closing Techniques for Restoration Sales: Emergency, Planned, and Commercial

    Closing Techniques for Restoration Sales: Emergency, Planned, and Commercial

    Closing in restoration sales is contextual. The technique that closes a 2am emergency water mitigation call at the kitchen table will not close a planned mold remediation project that involves comparison bids, and neither will close a commercial MSA negotiation. Effective restoration salespeople carry a small toolkit of closing techniques and the judgment to apply the right one to each situation.

    This article is part of our restoration sales playbook.

    The Assumptive Close (Emergency Mitigation)

    The assumptive close is the workhorse for emergency restoration sales. Rather than asking “Do you want to move forward?” — which invites delay — the rep transitions to logistics: “I’ll have the crew here in two hours with equipment. While we’re waiting, let me get this paperwork going so we can bill your insurance directly.” This works because in true emergencies the customer wants the problem solved, and the rep is simply removing friction.

    The assumptive close fails when the customer has not bought into the value yet — using it too early in the conversation triggers resistance.

    The Urgency Close (Time-Sensitive Damage)

    The urgency close uses the actual operational reality of restoration: secondary damage compounds rapidly. “If we wait another 24 hours, we’ll likely need to add demolition to the scope and the cost goes up significantly. Starting now keeps it contained at the current scope.” This works because it is true — restoration genuinely is time-sensitive — and reframes the decision as cost avoidance rather than spending.

    The Alternative Close (Commercial and Planned Work)

    The alternative close offers two acceptable paths rather than a yes/no decision: “Would you prefer we start Monday or next Wednesday?” or “Do you want us to handle the contents pack-out, or would you rather your team manage that piece?” This works because both options are progress; only refusal of the entire framing rejects the close.

    The Summary Close (Comparison Bid Situations)

    When the customer has explicitly mentioned getting other bids, the summary close walks back through everything that was just covered: “Let me make sure I have this right. You need [scope], you want it done by [date], you’re concerned about [issue], and you’re working with [insurance carrier]. Based on that, our scope at [price] covers everything we discussed and we can start [timeline]. Where does that leave us?” The summary creates a clear comparison framework against any competitor and surfaces remaining concerns directly.

    The Trial Close (Throughout the Conversation)

    Trial closes are temperature checks throughout the conversation rather than dedicated closing moves. Examples: “Does this scope match what you were thinking?” or “How does the timeline work for you?” These surface objections early when there is still room to handle them rather than letting concerns accumulate silently.

    The Pilot Close (Commercial New Logo)

    For commercial restoration sales, the pilot close shifts the decision from “do you want to give us all your work” to “would you give us one job to demonstrate our performance.” This dramatically reduces buyer risk and is often the only viable close for prospects without prior experience with the company. Successful pilots almost always lead to expanded relationships.

    When to Walk Away

    Sometimes the right close is no close. Walking away protects margin and reputation when: the customer demands pricing that puts the job below cost, the scope being requested is technically unsound (skipping critical drying or testing), the customer is signaling distrust that cannot be repaired, or the property condition is outside the company’s actual capability. Polite, confident exits (“I don’t think we’re the right fit for this project — best of luck”) preserve relationships for future opportunities.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the most effective close in restoration sales?

    There is no single most effective close — different situations call for different approaches. The assumptive close dominates in emergency mitigation, the urgency close works for time-sensitive damage, the alternative close fits planned work, and the pilot close opens commercial accounts. The judgment to match technique to situation matters more than mastering any single close.

    How do I close without sounding pushy?

    Confidence comes from genuine belief that the recommendation is right for the customer. Salespeople who feel pushy usually do because they are not fully convinced of the value. Spending time deeply understanding the work and outcomes makes confident closing feel natural rather than aggressive.

    Should restoration salespeople create false urgency?

    No. Real urgency exists in most restoration scenarios — secondary damage, mold growth, structural compromise — and using it honestly is appropriate. Inventing urgency that does not exist erodes trust and damages the company’s reputation when the customer figures it out later.

    What do I do when the customer says “send me a quote and I’ll think about it”?

    Resist sending a quote and disappearing. Either close the conversation in person (“Let me walk you through it now while I’m here”), schedule a specific follow-up call within 24 hours, or politely surface the actual concern: “I’m happy to send something — what’s the main thing you’d want to think through?”

    How do I close commercial restoration deals when there is a buying committee?

    Identify the actual decision-maker and the influencers, present to all of them when possible, and propose a pilot engagement to demonstrate performance rather than pushing for an immediate MSA. Most commercial closes happen in stages over months — the goal of any single meeting is to advance to the next stage.