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Commercial Landscaping Maintenance Contract Selling — 60-Min Training

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The Site-Walk Contract Sell is a 60-minute training for commercial grounds-maintenance sales reps (selling annual and multi-year property-care agreements worth $12K-$150K a year to property managers and HOA boards) that replaces the lowball bid with a disciplined four-part ritual: a documented site walk, a verbatim scope-and-SLA value frame, a multi-year agreement close, and a quarterly site review that protects renewal.

Built on NALP commercial-services standards, Neil Rackham's "SPIN Selling" discovery method, and Mike Weinberg's "New Sales. Simplified." prospecting discipline, this session teaches reps to sell the *recurring property-care program* — defined scope, service-level commitments, and predictable seasonal labor — not a mowing price, by walking the property with the manager, documenting risk, and locking an annual contract with the commercial property manager or HOA board.


Section 1 — Why Reps Lose the Commercial Contract (5 min)

Open with the hard truth: most grounds-maintenance reps bid a number and lose the renewal, because a price-only win gets re-bid every spring. A property manager who picks the lowest mowing number will drop you for the next lowest number twelve months later. NALP member operators consistently report that commercial accounts won on a documented *scope and service level* renew far longer than accounts won on price.

Set the frame on the whiteboard:

End the segment by reading the rule aloud: "We don't sell mowing. We run a recurring property-care program with a defined scope and a written service level, so the property manager never fields a complaint they didn't expect." The annual contract is the product.


Section 2 — The Documented Site Walk (15 min)

Discovery is a walk of the property, clipboard in hand, with the decision-maker beside you. Neil Rackham's SPIN method — Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-payoff — structures the walk. Have reps complete the verbatim walk template for a real target property now.

Verbatim Site-Walk Template (rep completes on-site, with the manager, before bidding):

  1. Property: [Name] — [Type: office park, retail, HOA, medical] — [Acreage] — [# of zones or buildings]
  2. Current state: Self-performed / Incumbent contractor / No program — [incumbent name and contract end date]
  3. Conditions I DOCUMENTED: [Thin turf, overgrown beds, broken irrigation heads, trip hazards, dead trees, drainage]
  4. Implication if unaddressed: [Tenant complaints, slip-and-fall liability, failed property inspection, lost curb appeal]
  5. Scope by zone: [Mowing frequency, bed maintenance, fertilization, irrigation checks, seasonal cleanups, tree and shrub care]
  6. The ONE risk I will quantify in the proposal: [Pick the single most expensive consequence — liability, tenant turnover, or emergency repairs]

Coach the "document it, don't eyeball it" ruleNALP commercial-services selling insists you walk every zone and photograph every condition. If the rep bids from the truck, push back: *"You can't price risk you didn't walk. Get out and document it."* Show the bad example: *"What's your budget for mowing?"* — that reduces a property-care program to a single line item and hands pricing power to the buyer.

flowchart TD A[Rep Books Site Walk] --> B{Property Manager Walking With You?} B -->|No| C[Reschedule: No Walk Without Decision Maker] B -->|Yes| D[Document Every Zone and Risk] D --> E[Photograph Hazards and Conditions] E --> F[Quantify ONE Expensive Risk] F --> G[Confirm Incumbent Contract End Date] G --> H[Build Scope and SLA Proposal Not Mowing Bid] H --> I[Present Annual Agreement + Multi-Year Term]

Section 3 — Selling the Scope and SLA, Not the Mow (10 min)

This is where the recurring contract is won or lost. Drill the language.

What to NEVER say to a commercial property manager (read aloud, slowly):

Mike Weinberg's rule applies on the property: stop competing on price, start documenting the risk the manager is carrying and the program that retires it.


Section 4 — The Multi-Year Agreement Close (10 min)

The close is a signed annual or multi-year agreement with a defined scope and a written SLA. Use the verbatim script.

Verbatim Close Script (rep delivers at the proposal walkthrough):

Rep: "On our walk we documented 11 broken irrigation heads, two dead trees near the entrance, and thinning turf along the main drive — every one of those is a tenant complaint or a liability waiting to happen."

[Slide the scope-by-zone proposal across. Point to the service-level page. Stay quiet for five seconds.]

Rep: "This proposal defines exactly what we do, how often, and how fast we respond. The annual rate is locked, and the service level is in writing — so you're never surprised at a board meeting."

[Manager reacts. Do not fill the silence.]

Rep: "Most of our commercial accounts sign a three-year agreement because that locks your rate and assigns a dedicated crew. Does a two-year or three-year term fit your budget cycle?"

[Assumptive choice close. Manager picks a term, not whether to sign.]

Rep: "Perfect. Your account crew lead, [name], will do the first scheduled visit the week of [date]. Let's confirm the property access and gate codes today."

Do NOT:


Section 5 — The Math and the Quarterly Site Review (15 min)

Build the recurring-revenue math on the whiteboard. Reps who chase one-off bids instead of annual contracts rebuild their book from zero every spring.

flowchart TD A[Agreement Signed Week 1] --> B[First Scheduled Visits + Punch List Week 2] B --> C[First Month: Close Out Documented Conditions] C --> D[Quarterly Site Review With Manager] D --> E{Scope Meeting Property Needs?} E -->|No| F[Adjust Scope or Add Enhancement Before Renewal] E -->|Yes| G[Log Reference + Propose Seasonal Upsell] F --> H[Protect Renewal Through Service Level] G --> H H --> I[Multi-Year Term Continues at Locked Rate]

The math (for one mid-size office-park account):

NALP operators note that quarterly site reviews with the property manager drive renewal far more than season-end check-ins; you sell the renewal all year, not in the last month.

Common commercial-contract objections (rehearse the comebacks):

Have every rep calculate the multi-year contract value of their top target property before they leave the room.


Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)

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

Close by reading the rule one more time: "We don't sell mowing. We run a recurring property-care program with a defined scope and a written service level." Then send the room out to walk properties, not quote per-cut prices.


FAQ

Q1: How is selling a commercial contract different from a residential bid? A: A residential bid is a one-time or seasonal price for a single yard. A commercial agreement is a defined annual program — scope by zone, written service levels, a dedicated crew, and multi-year term — sold to a property manager accountable for liability and budget.

Q2: What if the property manager only wants a mowing price? A: Walk the property first and document the risk. *"I can give you a number, but you'd be paying for mowing while the broken irrigation and dead trees stay your liability. Let me show you the full scope."*

Q3: How do I beat an entrenched incumbent contractor? A: Compete on documented scope, service level, and the conditions they've let slide — not price. NALP operators win commercial switches on quality gaps and liability, not on being cheaper.

Q4: What if the manager won't walk the property with me? A: Reschedule. A bid built from the parking lot misses the risk and the scope nobody owns. No documented walk, no proposal.

Q5: How often should I review the account after signing? A: Quarterly site reviews with the property manager. Close out documented conditions, adjust scope, and propose seasonal enhancements — that's how the renewal is earned all year, not in the final month.

Q6: Why push a multi-year term instead of a one-year contract? A: A multi-year agreement locks the rate against inflation, keeps the dedicated crew that knows the property, and ends the annual re-bid that erodes quality. The term is the protection for both sides.


Sources

  1. Neil Rackham, *SPIN Selling*, McGraw-Hill, 1988.
  2. Mike Weinberg, *New Sales. Simplified.*, AMACOM, 2013.
  3. National Association of Landscape Professionals (NALP), *Commercial Maintenance and Industry Standards*, landscapeprofessionals.org, 2023-2025.
  4. Jeb Blount, *Fanatical Prospecting*, Wiley, 2015.
  5. Anthony Iannarino, *The Lost Art of Closing*, Portfolio/Penguin, 2017.
  6. Robert Cialdini, *Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion*, Harper Business, revised 2021.
  7. Irrigation Association, *Best Management Practices for Commercial Properties*, irrigation.org, 2023.
  8. Brian Tracy, *The Psychology of Selling*, Thomas Nelson, 2004.
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