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Kitchen and Bath Remodel In-Home Sales — 60-Min Training

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The Kitchen and Bath Remodel In-Home Sales Reboot is a 60-minute training for home-improvement design consultants and in-home sales reps that replaces the measure-and-mail-a-quote habit with a disciplined four-part in-home process: confirm both decision-makers are present before you start, run a needs-and-budget discovery before you design, present the scope and the investment together with financing built in, and ask for the decision at the table.

Built on the in-home selling discipline of the National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI), National Kitchen & Bath Association (NKBA) design-process standards, and the one-call-close methodology common to home-improvement sales, this session teaches reps to stop leaving with "I'll email the estimate" — because the remodel sold at the kitchen table closes far more often than the one mailed to a homeowner who then shops it.


Stack You'll Run This Training Inside

Every AE in the room operates inside the standard RevOps stack. Reference these tools by name during the training so reps know which dashboard or workflow you mean. Pin the dashboard you'll inspect in HubSpot on a shared screen before the meeting starts, queue the most recent recording from Chorus as the coaching artifact, and have Salesloft open in a second tab for the post-meeting cadence updates.

The manager who shows up with these three browser tabs ready saves 8 minutes of meeting setup.

Benchmark Context

OpenView ("2026 SaaS Benchmarks Report") found that product-led growth motions still require 60+ minutes of weekly enterprise-tier rep training to convert PLG signups into paid expansion contracts. Anchor the training narrative on this stat — it's the credibility frame that turns a 60-minute meeting from "another sales pep talk" into "the weekly working session the manager is measured on." Print the stat at the top of the meeting agenda; reps remember the number, and quoting it builds the same shared vocabulary that Lessonly, Spekit, and Highspot all flag as the top predictor of multi-quarter training-program ROI in their 2026 customer benchmarks.

Section 1 — Why Mailed Remodel Quotes Lose (5 min)

Open the room with the pattern. The consultant measures, says "I'll put together a quote and send it over," then loses the job to whoever sat at the table and asked for the decision. NARI's selling guidance is direct: a remodel is an emotional, high-trust purchase, and trust is built in person, not in a PDF.

The mailed quote becomes a number the homeowner shops against two competitors. The one-call discipline isn't pressure — it's respecting that the homeowner invited you in to solve a problem, not to receive a spreadsheet next week.

Set the frame on the whiteboard:

End the segment by reading the rule aloud: *"A mailed quote is a number to shop. A kitchen-table conversation is a project to start."*


Section 2 — The Pre-Appointment Confirmation (15 min)

Before any in-home appointment, the rep confirms the conditions for a real decision. No both-parties-present, reschedule. Walk the room through the template — have reps fill it out for a real upcoming appointment.

Verbatim Pre-Appointment Confirmation Template (rep confirms before the visit):

  1. Homeowner(s): [Name(s)] — [Both decision-makers confirmed present? Y/N]
  2. Project: [Kitchen / bath / both] — [Scope they described] — [Rough budget range discussed]
  3. The "why now": [What's driving it — resale, a failing layout, a life event]
  4. What they've shopped: [Other bids? Pinterest/Houzz images? A number in their head?]
  5. Financing to present: [In-house / third-party] — [presented as routine, with monthly framing]
  6. The decision I'll ask for: [Sign and schedule today / reserve the install slot / select finishes]

Coach the reps on the "both decision-makers" rule — home-improvement sales calls this avoiding the "one-legger." If only one spouse will be home, push back: *"Let's find a time you're both there. I want both of you to love it, and decisions on a project this size usually need both of you."*

Show the bad example: *"I'll just swing by, measure, and email you a price."* That guarantees a shopped quote and a lost job.

flowchart TD A[Book Appointment] --> B{Both Decision-Makers Confirmed?} B -->|No| C[Reschedule for When Both Are Home] B -->|Yes| D[Discovery: Needs, Budget, Why-Now] D --> E[Design + Scope on Site] E --> F[Present Scope + Investment + Financing Together] F --> G{Ready to Proceed?} G -->|Yes| H[Sign + Reserve Install Date] G -->|Hesitant| I[Surface Real Objection: Budget, Trust, Timing] I --> G

Section 3 — The Discovery-Before-Design Rule (10 min)

The discipline that separates a closed remodel from a mailed quote. Drill it.

The one exception: For very large or structural projects requiring engineering, a same-night signature may not be realistic — but still secure a signed design agreement and a deposit to lock the project.

What to NEVER say in an in-home remodel call (read these aloud, slowly):

NKBA's design-process standards stress that the consultant who guides the homeowner through needs, design, and investment in one structured visit builds the trust that closes the project.


Section 4 — The Live In-Home Script (10 min)

Run the close using the verbatim script. Have reps role-play it — one plays the hesitant homeowner couple, one the consultant — then swap.

Verbatim In-Home Close Script (rep uses these words):

Rep: "Before I measure anything — walk me through it. What do you hate about this kitchen, and what would 'perfect' look like?"

[Both homeowners describe pains and wants. Listen, don't pitch.]

Rep: "Got it. So we're solving [their pains] and creating [their vision]. To design something you'll actually move forward on, what investment range are we working in?"

[Get the range. Design to it.]

Rep: "Here's the scope, here's the design, and here's the investment: [number]. Most homeowners do this with a monthly payment — that puts it around [monthly]. How does that feel?"

[Homeowners hesitate: "We need to think about it."]

Rep: "Totally fair. Help me understand — is it the design, the investment, or the timing? I'd rather solve the real thing than leave you with a number to puzzle over."

Rep: "Let's reserve your install date — my next opening is [date]. We can finalize finishes next week."

The one-call-close discipline in home improvement, reinforced by NARI's selling guidance, shows in-home decisions close at a far higher rate than mailed quotes, because the trust and the design context exist only in that room.

Do NOT:


Section 5 — The Lead and Follow-Up Cadence (15 min)

Build the system on a whiteboard. In-home sales lives and dies on confirmed appointments and disciplined follow-up on the ones that don't close on the spot.

flowchart TD A[Lead Booked] --> B[Confirm Both Decision-Makers] B --> C[Run In-Home Process] C --> D{Closed at Table?} D -->|Yes| E[Deposit + Install Date + Finish Selection] D -->|No| F[Log Real Objection] F --> G[Next Day: Call, Address the Objection] G --> H[Day 5: Revised Option or Financing Tweak] H --> I{Now Ready?} I -->|Yes| E I -->|No| J[Nurture: Seasonal Promo + Stay in Touch]

The math (for a consultant running 8 in-home appointments a week):

Common rep objections (rehearse the comebacks):

Have each rep confirm both decision-makers on their next two appointments before they leave the room.


Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)

Each rep leaves with three written commitments, taped to their truck dash:

Close by reading the in-home selling principle aloud: *"The remodel you mail a quote for belongs to whoever sat at the table and asked for the job."*

Then post the in-home script in the team room and run a live couple-role-play with the manager.


FAQ

Q1: Isn't insisting both spouses be home going to cost me appointments? A: It costs you the appointments that wouldn't have closed anyway. A project this size and emotional almost always needs both decision-makers; presenting to one and "checking with the other" is where deals stall.

Q2: What if the homeowner truly won't give a budget? A: Offer ranges: "Most projects like this land between X and Y — where are you comfortable?" If they still won't, design good/better/best so they self-select.

Q3: Some projects are too complex to close in one visit. Then what? A: Secure a signed design agreement and a deposit to lock the project and your schedule, then finalize details. You still close the commitment in the room.

Q4: How do I present price without scaring them? A: Present scope and value first, then the number, then monthly financing immediately. The monthly figure reframes a large total into a manageable decision.

Q5: They've got two other bids. How do I win? A: Win on trust and clarity in the room — the competitors mailed numbers. Connect the design to their stated pains and ask for the decision while you're there.

Q6: When is a discount appropriate? A: Rarely as a first move — it trains homeowners to haggle and signals the price was padded. Solve the real objection (financing, scope, trust) before touching price.


Sources

  1. National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI), *Selling and Business Development* resources, nari.org.
  2. National Kitchen & Bath Association (NKBA), *The NKBA Professional Resource Library* and design-process standards, nkba.org.
  3. Brian Tracy, *The Psychology of Selling*, Thomas Nelson, 2004.
  4. Remodeling Magazine, *Cost vs. Value Report*, 2023-2024.
  5. Dave Yoho Associates, *In-Home Sales Training* methodology, daveyoho.com.
  6. Tom Hopkins, *How to Master the Art of Selling*, Grand Central, 2005.
  7. Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, *Remodeling Market Reports*, 2023-2024.
  8. Robert Cialdini, *Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion*, Harper Business, 2006.
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