Cemetery Pre-Planning Sales — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Compassion-First Pre-Planning Ritual is a 60-minute training for cemetery family-service and pre-need counselors who help families secure interment rights, property, and memorialization merchandise before a death occurs. It replaces pressure-closing with a four-part ethical motion: a permission-based opening that names the family's *why*, a guided property walk that matches needs to ground, a transparent price presentation with no hidden installment traps, and a soft close anchored in *protecting the family from inflation and emotional decision-making*.
Built on the ICCFA (International Cemetery, Cremation and Funeral Association) pre-need code of ethics, the FTC Funeral Rule disclosure standards, and Tom Kubat's consultative pre-need methodology, this session teaches counselors to sell the *peace of removing a future burden* — never fear.
Section 1 — Why Pre-Planning Is a Gift, Not a Sale (5 min)
Open by reframing the job. A pre-need counselor is not closing a casket — they are removing the single worst decision a grieving family ever makes: buying cemetery property at the moment of maximum grief and maximum price. The ICCFA estimates that at-need families overspend by 20-40% versus families who pre-planned, simply because they cannot negotiate while in shock.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The old approach: Cold-call, fear-sell ("what happens to your kids if you die tomorrow?"), push the most expensive plot.
- The compassion-first approach: Earn permission, listen for the family's *why*, match property to genuine need, present price with full transparency.
- The ethical north star: If the family doesn't buy today, they should still leave feeling cared for.
Read the ICCFA Code of Professional Conduct rule aloud: *"A counselor's first obligation is to the family's interest, not the sale."* End by reminding the room: cemetery property is one of the few purchases that only goes up in price — locking today's rate is a legitimate, defensible benefit, and William McQueen's pre-need research shows families who pre-plan report far lower regret than those who wait.
Section 2 — The Permission-Based Opening (15 min)
The first 90 seconds decide everything. Walk the room through the verbatim opening — have each counselor fill it out for a real upcoming family meeting right now.
Verbatim Pre-Planning Opening Template (counselor fills out, uses live):
- Acknowledge the visit reason: [e.g., "You mentioned you recently lost your father here — I'm so sorry."]
- Ask permission to explore: "Would it be helpful if I showed you how families protect themselves from making this decision under pressure?"
- Surface the why: "When you picture your family standing here someday, what matters most to you — being together, a specific view, near your father?"
- Name the two real benefits: Price locked at today's rate. Decision made calmly, not in grief.
- Set the no-pressure frame: "Nothing has to happen today. My job is to give you the full picture."
- Confirm next step: "Can I walk you through the property so you can see the options with your own eyes?"
Coach the "why before what" rule — never quote a plot before you know whether the family values *togetherness*, *a view*, *proximity to existing graves*, or *a specific religious section*. Show the bad opening: *"We have a special this month, let me show you our premium estate lots."* That leads with price and product, not the family.
Section 3 — The Property Walk and Compliance Guardrails (10 min)
The property walk is where counselors earn trust or destroy it. Drill the guardrails.
- Walk the actual ground. Families buy a *place*, not a line item. Stand on the lot, point to the tree, the view.
- Match, don't upsell. If a family wants two side-by-side spaces, do not steer them to a six-space estate plot.
- Disclose everything in writing. Interment rights, opening/closing fees, perpetual care, and merchandise are separate line items — never bundle to obscure.
- Honor the FTC Funeral Rule spirit. Even where cemetery sales sit outside the strict Rule, give an itemized price list on request.
What to NEVER say to a pre-planning family (read these aloud, slowly):
- "This price is only good today." (manufactured urgency — an ICCFA ethics violation in most states)
- "You don't want to leave this burden on your children, do you?" (guilt-selling; weaponizes grief)
- "Everyone in this section is already sold out except this one." (false scarcity)
- "Cremation is the cheap way out." (shames a legitimate, ICCFA-recognized choice)
- "Let's just put it on the installment plan, you won't even notice it." (hides the true cost and finance charges)
- Anything implying a religious or moral consequence for not buying — counselors sell property, never salvation.
The ICCFA position is blunt: in pre-need, your job is to be a trusted advisor. Pressure tactics generate cancellations, refunds, and state board complaints — they cost more than they close.
Section 4 — The Transparent Price Presentation (10 min)
Run the presentation only after the walk, only after the why. Use the verbatim script.
Verbatim Price Presentation Script (counselor opens with these exact words):
Counselor: "Let me show you exactly what you're considering, line by line, so there are no surprises. This is the interment right itself — the property. This is the perpetual care fund, which keeps the grounds maintained forever. And these are optional — the marker and the opening service."
[Slide the itemized sheet across. Stay silent. Let the family read.]
Family member: "Why is there a separate care fee?"
Counselor: "Great question — by state law, a portion of every sale goes into a trust that funds maintenance long after we're all gone. It protects you from ever being billed again."
[Pause. Do not fill the silence.]
Counselor: "If you choose to secure this today, your price is locked at this rate. If you wait, it follows our published increases. There's no pressure — I just want you to have the full picture."
Counselor: "What questions can I answer before you decide what feels right for your family?"
Do NOT:
- Quote a single "out the door" number that hides perpetual care or opening/closing fees.
- Push the installment plan without stating the finance charge and total cost in plain dollars.
- Continue selling after a family says they need to think — give them the itemized sheet and a card.
Section 5 — The Soft Close and Pre-Need Economics (15 min)
Build the close on a whiteboard. Pre-need is a *protection* sale, so the close protects, never pressures.
The math (why pre-planning protects the family):
- A companion lot today: ~$6,000. At a typical 5% annual cemetery price increase, the same lot in 10 years: ~$9,770 — a $3,770 inflation cost the family avoids by locking now.
- ICCFA Credit Exchange Plan gives families dollar-for-dollar transfer credit (up to $6,000 for mausoleum crypts, $3,500 for other property) if they relocate — so a pre-need purchase travels with them.
- At-need overspend runs 20-40% per ICCFA estimates — on a $10,000 outlay, that's $2,000-$4,000 of grief-driven over-purchasing avoided.
Common family objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"I don't want to think about death."* — "I understand completely. That's exactly why pre-planning helps — you think about it once, calmly, and never have to again."
- *"What if I move?"* — "Through the ICCFA Credit Exchange Plan, your purchase transfers with you to any participating cemetery."
- *"Isn't this morbid for my kids?"* — "Families tell us the opposite — children are grateful they weren't left guessing about Mom or Dad's wishes."
- *"I can't afford it right now."* — "Let's look at a fully disclosed monthly plan — many families protect today's price for under $100 a month."
Have each counselor practice ending a presentation with a genuine no-pressure exit line before they leave the room.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each counselor leaves with three written commitments, taped to their desk:
- I will earn permission and surface the family's why before I quote a single price.
- I will present every contract itemized and in writing, including perpetual care and finance charges.
- I will never use manufactured urgency, guilt, or false scarcity — and if a family isn't ready, they leave feeling cared for, not cornered.
Close by reading the ICCFA standard aloud: *"The measure of a pre-need professional is not what they sold, but the trust the family carries home."*
Then send the room out with the compassion-first charter pinned at every counselor's station.
FAQ
Q1: Isn't pre-need selling just exploiting people's fear of death? A: It's the opposite when done ethically. The ICCFA frames pre-need as protecting families from grief-driven over-purchasing and locked-in inflation. Fear tactics are an ethics violation; transparent protection is the legitimate value.
Q2: How is cemetery pre-need different from funeral-home pre-need? A: Cemetery counselors sell interment rights (the property), perpetual care, and memorialization merchandise. Funeral homes sell services and caskets. The motions overlap, but cemetery selling centers on the *place* and the price-locking benefit of property.
Q3: What's the single most important compliance rule? A: Full written itemization. Interment rights, perpetual care, opening/closing, and merchandise must appear as separate, disclosed line items. Hidden bundling drives cancellations and state board complaints.
Q4: How do I handle a family that wants cremation, not burial? A: Honor it completely. Show cremation gardens, niches, and scattering memorials. Cremation is an ICCFA-recognized choice — never shame it or steer toward burial.
Q5: What if a family signs and then has buyer's remorse? A: Most states grant a 3-day right to cancel on pre-need contracts. Disclose it proactively. A clean refund preserves the relationship far better than a fought-over cancellation.
Q6: Does the price-lock benefit really matter? A: Yes — cemetery property is one of the few purchases that only rises. At a typical 5% annual increase, locking today saves families thousands over a decade, and the ICCFA Credit Exchange Plan lets the purchase transfer if they move.
Sources
- International Cemetery, Cremation and Funeral Association (ICCFA), *Code of Professional Conduct* and *Pre-Need Sales Standards*, iccfa.com, 2024-2026.
- International Cemetery, Cremation and Funeral Association (ICCFA), *Credit Exchange Plan Terms and Conditions*, 2022-2026.
- U.S. Federal Trade Commission, *The Funeral Rule (16 CFR Part 453)*, ftc.gov.
- Tom Kubat, *Consultative Pre-Need Selling for Cemetery and Funeral Professionals*, industry training curriculum, 2019-2024.
- William McQueen, *The Pre-Need Counselor's Field Guide*, cemetery sales methodology, 2020.
- Cremation Association of North America (CANA), *Cremation Consumer Choice Standards*, cremationassociation.org, 2024.
- National Funeral Directors Association (NFDA), *Consumer Pricing and Disclosure Guidance*, nfda.org, 2024.
- ICCFA Educational Foundation, *University College of Sales and Marketing* curriculum materials, 2023-2025.