I just
finished having a replacement furnace and
central air conditioner installed in my house.
The experience was such an adventure that I
thought I'd share it with you. I will
present the process from the consumer's
standpoint to reemphasize the need to evaluate
your sales processes and training on
a regular basis.

The Estimates
Last month I told about my efforts to get local
HVAC companies to respond to my request for
quotation for a replacement furnace and central
AC. 3 out of the 4 companies that I called
dropped the ball on the initial phone contact.
When it came time for the actual estimating
process, their performance was also mixed.
We're looking
for a high efficiency furnace (94+) and high
SEER AC (14). All salesmen arrived promptly and
looked professional. Almost all asked questions
about the square footage of the house,
insulation, etc. All read the capacities
of the existing units.
The first
salesman to arrive was from a local company that
came highly recommended. He quickly
gathered his information and was ready to begin
writing his quote. I stopped him and asked
about venting the furnace since I have a deck on
the closest exterior wall. He said that
there would be no problem and that they had
several options as to how to vent.
The written
proposal was on a preprinted Estimate/Work Order
form. Everything was spelled out and
explained fully. Everything was included in the
price including permits. I had the bottom
line number.
The next
salesman to arrive was from the company that had
originally installed the AC and furnace.
Things went down hill when we got inside and he
did not recognize the furnace that his own
company had installed and serviced. After
evaluating the situation, he says that I cannot
have a high efficiency furnace because it cannot
be vented properly due to various impediments.
Since I already had a quote in hand for the
installation of a high efficiency system, this
seemed odd.
The written
proposal was a mix of hand written details on a
preprinted multipart estimate form. The
details were clear and he explained each of them
in detail. There were a couple of problems
with the quote. First, the warranty included an
extension by the installing company. This was
good, but was not spelled out anywhere in
writing. Second, they would take care of
any required permits. The cost would be
added later and he had no idea of what it would
be. The average homeowner would have no idea
what these costs could be, so his bottom line
was uncertain.
This second
quote was about 10% higher than the first one
that I had received and the furnace was only 80%
efficient.
The third
was from the company that installed a third
manufacturer's system. He arrived just at
the end of the one hour window he had given me.
He did a quick run through and told me he would
email me a quote the next day because he was
running late. He wanted to leave me with
some brochures, so we went out to his illegally
parked car (Wrong way an the street, blocking a
fire hydrant and neighbors driveway).
He did not have
the brochure I needed in the pile on the back
seat, so he fished one out of the trunk from
under his golf clubs. Yes, he did look
like he was dressed for the links. The
email arrived 3 days later. It looked very
professional. Well typed and complete.
Unfortunately, he quoted the wrong furnace -
their standard 80% efficiency model even though
the written summary of the job specified a high
efficiency model. The quote included permits
and all modifications and was about the same as
the quote from the first company.
While I was
waiting for the third quote to arrive via email,
I was convinced to call a company that NSPG had
met with recently. After the usual run
through, he opened his phonebook sized customer
references book. There had to be 10,000
names and addresses in the book including people
one street away from my house.
Unfortunately, he sort of riffled through the
book as if he did not want me to really contact
anyone in it.
Then, he pulled
out his flat rate price book for furnaces and AC
units. Finally, someone who knew how to
make the purchase easy. No cryptic hand
written scrawl with numbers I can't understand.
He flipped it open and we started with the
"Good" systems. I had to convince him that
I wanted high efficiency, so we moved to the
"Better" systems.
That's when
things went bad. He began scribbling
numbers on the back of a piece of paper totaling
up the AC and furnace costs and deducting the
various rebates. By the time he was done,
he had taken a perfectly straightforward flat
rate price and made it completely
incomprehensible. And, to top it off,
there was no difference in the installed price
of the AC unit with or without the furnace
install. Without a Secondary Task price on
the combined job, he had priced himself out of
the bidding.
His price was
1/3 higher than the closest comparable system
price I had in hand. Now I'm willing to
grant him a 10% price difference as with the
comparable quote I had received for the same
equipment, but by not setting up their flat rate
books properly, they're pricing themselves out
of jobs.
To his credit,
this salesman did call back several times to see
if I had made a decision. None of the
other three salesman ever contacted me again.
It was like they didn't want to sell me
anything. Were they all so busy that they
did not need my business? More likely,
they did not have a sales procedure that
required them to make a follow up call.
So, three out
of four estimates were serious flawed.
Two were for equipment I did not want. One was
priced too high because they relied on a limited
home-made flat rate book that they were not
competitive. One company quoted me what I
was looking for and gave me a clear bottom line
price. Only one company did a follow up phone
call. And, all sized their
proposed units based solely on the size of the
existing system. I saw no calculations done to
properly size the unit to the house.
What can we learn
from this?
- Give the
customer a quote for the product the
customer wants. If it's inappropriate for
the application explain why and submit your
quote for the agreed upon product.
- Give them
a clear bottom line price with all that they
need to get the job done right. Most
of your customers want to buy a solution to
the problem. They don't want to buy a
specific furnace and AC. They want a
good efficient way to heat and cool their
house. They don't want to hear about
unknown permit costs and verbal guarantees.
- Properly
constructed and used flat rate price books
really make the buying process easier.
The one flat rate offering I saw during this
process really was an excellent sales tool.
They had the details of the products spelled
out with a clear bottom line price. I was
even convinced that the "Best" model was the
one to get. Without trying, he had
up-sold me on a more expensive unit because
of the Good, Better, Best presentation.
Unfortunately, the poor pricing design and
confused sales implementation made his
bottom line pricing confusing and
uncompetitive.
Tune in Next
Month for the exciting saga of
The Installation. |