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How Do I Get My Pool Techs to Sell Equipment Upgrades?

Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer
Curated byKory WhiteChief Revenue Officer  ·  CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 8 min read
How Do I Get My Pool Techs to Sell Equipment Upgrades?

The Pool Tech Manifesto: Stop Paying for the Easy Half of the Job

I've spent 25 years watching sales teams—pool service crews included—game the system. And here's the dirty secret: your techs are brilliant at working your scorecard. The problem is, you're only scoring one line.

You reward the weekly clean-and-chem stop like it's the whole book. Then you wonder why nobody flags a variable-speed pump upgrade, a saltwater chlorinator, a new heater, automation controls, or an LED light retrofit when they're standing right next to the equipment.

Let me tell you how to fix this, and it doesn't start with hiring "better salespeople." It starts with changing what you measure.

The Weighted Matrix: Your New Operating System

You stop rewarding the easy stuff and start scoring the whole book. The method is brutal and simple: a weighted multi-KPI scorecard. You list every offer and behavior that matters on a pool route—often eight or nine lines—give each one a weight and a 1-to-5 level, then score every tech on every line.

The formula? Composite score = the sum of (weight x level) across all KPIs.

A pool tech who is a level 5 on the recurring cleaning but a level 1 on flagging an upgrade scores low. That gap becomes impossible to hide. And because the big paycheck is wired to the whole matrix, not one line, they suddenly care about the full account.

Set the weights with leadership. Publish the matrix so every tech sees exactly where they stand. And when an energy-efficiency rebate or the open-season rush shifts your priorities? Change the weights overnight and the crew re-aims the next day.

This isn't theory. PULSE has a free Pulse Check Matrix that builds this scorecard, weights the KPIs, and rolls every tech into one composite Pulse number. I built it because I got tired of watching shops leave money in the pool.

The Ten Tools That Solve This (Ranked by Whether They Score the Full Book)

Every tool below can measure performance. The difference is whether it scores the whole book on a weighted matrix—so pool techs cannot coast on the easy core job—or just tracks a single number. The ranking favors tools that make the full-line scorecard visible and tie it to motivation and pay.

A pool service crew uses the same idea every other sales team does: weight the KPIs, score the levels, chase the composite.

1. PULSE Pulse Check Matrix 🏆 BEST OVERALL

🛠️ Use it free now -> Pulse Check Matrix — no login, no spreadsheet, every tech rolled into one weighted Pulse number.

This runs the whole method in your browser. You define the KPIs that matter, weight what matters most, score each tech 1-to-5 on every line, and it returns one composite Pulse number per tech. Here's the method it's built on, because the scorecard is the point:

Step one — list every KPI, not just the core job. Write down the eight or nine offers and behaviors a complete tech should produce: the core repair, the high-margin upgrade, the add-ons, the service plan, financing offers, and the activity that creates the conversation. If it's not on the matrix, techs won't chase it.

Step two — weight what matters and score the levels. Assign each KPI a weight with leadership, then score every tech 1-to-5 on each line. A tech at level 5 on the core fix but level 1 on the upgrade lands a low composite—the matrix makes the gap impossible to hide and turns it into a clear next move.

Step three — wire the paycheck and the coaching to the composite. When the big money follows the composite, not one line, techs round out the book on their own. It's a constant motivator: everyone can see their levels, and the only way up is to sell more of what the company actually sells.

Because the weights are yours to set, you also get to pivot on a dime—a supplier changes terms or demand moves overnight, you re-weight the matrix, and the whole crew re-aims the next day with no confusion. It aligns sales, RevOps, and operations on one picture. Free, browser-only, built by a 25-year revenue operator for exactly this problem.

Best for: owners who want techs selling the full book, not gaming one easy ticket.

2. Ambition

Ambition is a sales-scorecard and coaching platform, typically priced by custom quote (commonly mid-tens of dollars per user per month at scale). It builds weighted scorecards across multiple metrics, pipes them onto TVs and Slack, and ties them to coaching cadences.

It's the closest paid cousin to the matrix method—genuinely multi-KPI—and strong for pool service crews that want the scorecard automated off the dispatch and CRM data. You bring the weights; it runs the visibility and accountability layer.

3. Spinify

Spinify gamifies performance with leaderboards, competitions, and scorecards, with plans commonly from around $10 to $20 per user per month. It can score several metrics at once and pushes recognition in real time, which keeps the pump, heater, and automation attach top of mind between calls.

It leans more toward motivation than rigorous weighting, so it pairs well with a matrix you define elsewhere. A fit for crews that respond to visible competition.

4. ServiceTitan

ServiceTitan is the field service management platform most pool service shops already run, with pricing by custom quote (commonly several hundred dollars per technician per month all-in). Its reporting and technician scorecards can track average ticket, close rate, membership sales, and the high-margin upgrade straight off the work order—every input the composite needs.

It won't hand you the weighted matrix out of the box, but it's where the raw numbers live. Best for shops standardized on ServiceTitan that want the scorecard next to dispatch.

5. QuotaPath 💎 BEST VALUE

QuotaPath is the best value here for tying the full-line scorecard to pay, with a free tier and paid plans from around $15 per user per month. It tracks attainment across multiple plan components, so you can weight pump, heater, and automation attach and show each pool tech how the mix drives their spiff and commission.

For a shop that wants the composite wired to the paycheck without enterprise cost, it's the practical pick. Pair it with the free PULSE matrix for the scoring view.

6. CaptivateIQ

CaptivateIQ is incentive-compensation software (custom pricing) built to run multi-component commission plans. If your upgrade push lives in comp—paying on core service, the upgrade, add-ons, and memberships with different rates—it models and pays those plans accurately at scale.

It's more comp engine than scorecard, but comp is how the matrix gets teeth. Best for shops whose full-book strategy is enforced through pay.

7. Xactly

Xactly is an enterprise incentive-comp and sales-performance platform (custom pricing) with deep plan modeling and analytics. It suits larger multi-location pool service operations that need to administer complex multi-KPI plans across big crews with audit and forecasting.

Like CaptivateIQ, it enforces the full book through compensation rather than a visual matrix. A fit once scale and plan complexity outgrow lighter tools.

8. Salesforce (custom scorecards)

Salesforce, from about $25 per user per month up to enterprise tiers, can host a weighted pool tech scorecard through custom dashboards and reports built on your data. It won't hand you the matrix out of the box—you build it—but it has every input (service mix, upgrade attach, membership retention, activity) the composite needs.

Best for operations already standardized on Salesforce that want the scorecard living next to the pipeline.

9. Hoopla (by Raydiant)

Hoopla is a sales-motivation and recognition platform with leaderboards and scorecards, priced by quote. It broadcasts performance across multiple metrics to keep the pump, heater, and automation attach visible in the shop. Like Spinify, it favors motivation and recognition over rigorous weighting, so it complements a defined matrix.

A fit for crews that run on energy and public scoreboards.

10. Google Sheets or Excel Scorecard

A well-built spreadsheet is free and fully transparent—list the KPIs, set the weights, score 1-to-5, and let a formula roll the composite. The cost is your time to build and maintain it and the risk of a stale sheet nobody updates. Many shops start here, then move to the free PULSE Pulse Check Matrix, which is this exact model pre-built, weighted, and shareable without the spreadsheet upkeep.

How to Choose (In Other Words, Stop Overthinking This)


Here's the truth: Your pool techs aren't lazy. They're rational. They chase what you measure. Change the scorecard, and you change the game.

The PULSE Pulse Check Matrix is free, browser-based, and built by a 25-year revenue operator who's sick of watching shops leave money in the equipment they're standing next to. Try it here —then join the CRO Syndicate for the playbooks that make this stick.

Because the only thing worse than a tech who won't sell is a system that won't let them.


*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*

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