Equipment Financing and Leasing Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Cash-Flow-Not-Price Equipment Drill is a 60-minute training for equipment finance and leasing reps — both direct lenders and vendor-program reps — selling to business buyers acquiring machinery, trucks, IT, and gear ($25K-$2M transactions). It replaces "here's your monthly payment" order-taking with a disciplined ritual: an ROI-and-cash-flow discovery script, a vendor-program embedding play, and a structure-led close that frames the equipment as a revenue tool, not a cost.
Built on the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) standards, IRS Section 179 and bonus-depreciation rules, and proven B2B finance selling discipline, this session teaches reps to sell the use of the asset, not the cost of the lease.
Section 1 — Why Payment-Led Selling Leaves Money on the Table (5 min)
Open with the core reframe on the whiteboard. A business does not buy equipment — it buys the cash flow the equipment produces. A contractor doesn't want a $90K excavator; they want the three jobs a month it lets them bid. The rep who sells the revenue and the tax treatment wins; the rep who leads with "your payment is $1,750" gets shopped against every other quote.
Set the frame:
- The order-taker: "Want 36 or 48 months? Here's the payment." Now the buyer compares your payment to the bank's and you lose on a few dollars.
- The finance consultant: "Let's figure out what this asset earns and how to structure it so it pays for itself." Now you are an advisor.
- The metric that matters: approval-to-funding conversion and average ticket, not application count.
Read the ELFA orientation aloud: roughly eight in ten U.S. Businesses finance or lease at least some equipment rather than paying cash, because preserving working capital and matching cost to use beats tying up capital. End by naming the goal: today we learn to sell the asset's job, the tax benefit, and the structure — never just the payment.
Section 2 — The ROI and Cash-Flow Discovery Script (15 min)
Deals are won here. You cannot frame ROI you have not quantified. Walk the room through the verbatim discovery template — have each rep fill it out for a live deal right now.
Verbatim ROI Discovery Template (rep fills out live with the buyer):
- Business and asset: [Company] — [Equipment type] — [New or used] — [Cost]
- What the asset does for revenue: [Jobs it wins, capacity it adds, downtime it removes — in dollars per month]
- Cost of NOT having it: [Rentals, overtime, lost bids, subcontracting they pay today]
- Useful life and usage: [Years they'll run it, hours/miles per year — drives term matching]
- Cash position: [Would paying cash strain working capital or a credit line they need elsewhere]
- Tax appetite: [Do they want Section 179 expensing this year or to spread deductions — confirm with their CPA]
- The decision: [Who signs, what the vendor relationship is, what timeline forces the deal]
Coach the "match term to useful life" rule. Financing a 10-year CNC machine on a 60-month lease is fine; financing a laptop fleet on 60 months is malpractice — they're obsolete at 36. The structure should expire roughly when the asset's earning power does.
Show the bad example: *"It's $1,750 a month, sign here."* You quoted before you quantified what the asset earns. If the excavator nets the contractor $9,000 a month in new work, a $1,750 payment is a rounding error — but you only know that if you asked.
Section 3 — The Vendor-Program Embedding Play (10 min)
The highest-leverage equipment finance growth comes from owning the financing at the point of sale — embedding with the dealer or manufacturer so financing is offered before the buyer ever shops a bank. Drill it.
- The vendor is your distribution. A single equipment dealer can send 50 deals a year; one banked relationship beats 50 cold calls.
- Train the vendor's salespeople to present financing as a feature: "Own it and start earning, payments out of cash flow."
- Speed is the product. Vendors live and die on same-day approvals; your turnaround time wins or loses the program.
- Co-branded paperwork and a simple rate card keep the vendor selling for you when you're not in the room.
- Protect the vendor's reputation — a clean, transparent finance experience reflects on their brand.
The discipline: own three named vendor programs and review approval speed with each monthly. Vendor finance is a partnership; the dealer refers because you make their sales close faster.
What to NEVER say to a vendor partner or buyer (read aloud, slowly):
- "We'll approve anyone" (untrue, and it sets the vendor up to over-promise; disclose credit criteria honestly)
- "Don't worry about the residual, it's just a formality" (the residual/buyout is real money — explain $1 buyout vs FMV clearly)
- "This is basically the same as owning it" (a true lease is not ownership; misrepresenting it is a disclosure and accounting problem)
- "Ignore the fine print, the rate's all that matters" (documentation fees, end-of-term, and insurance requirements all matter — disclose them)
- "I'll get you a better rate than the manufacturer's captive" (sometimes the captive's subsidized rate genuinely wins — don't lie to win a deal you'll lose at funding)
- "You can write the whole thing off this year, guaranteed" (Section 179 limits and the buyer's tax situation vary — defer to their CPA, never promise a deduction)
Section 4 — The Structure-Led Close Script (10 min)
When the buyer fixates on rate or payment, you reframe to structure, tax, and what the asset earns. Use the verbatim script.
Verbatim Structure Close Script (rep speaks these exact words):
Rep: "Before we talk payment, let's confirm the math you gave me: this machine adds about $9,000 a month in billable work, and you'd otherwise tie up $90,000 in cash you need for payroll."
[Pause. Let the buyer confirm the numbers in their own words.]
Rep: "So the real question isn't the rate — it's whether this asset earns more than it costs. At a $1,750 payment against $9,000 of new work, it pays for itself the first week of every month."
[Buyer engages. Listen for the real driver — cash preservation or tax.]
Rep: "On structure: a 48-month lease matches the machine's working life, keeps your line of credit free, and we can set a $1 buyout so you own it outright at the end. If your CPA confirms you want the Section 179 deduction this year, we'll structure it so that's available."
Rep: "Everything's disclosed — payment, documentation fee, end-of-term, insurance requirement. If the numbers work for your business, can we get the application in today so you start earning this month?"
Cite the close logic: ELFA data shows businesses finance precisely to match cost to the asset's earning life and preserve liquidity. The rep who quantifies ROI and structures honestly closes bigger tickets at higher approval-to-funding rates than the one racing to the lowest payment.
Do NOT:
- Promise a tax outcome — Section 179 and bonus depreciation depend on the buyer's situation; route every tax claim to their CPA.
- Bury the buyout, residual, or insurance requirement — state them in the same breath as the payment.
- Misrepresent a lease as ownership or a loan as a lease; the structure and its accounting must be transparent.
Section 5 — The Deal Economics and Objection Handling (15 min)
Build the math on the whiteboard so reps see why ROI-framed selling beats payment-quoting. This is what order-takers never calculate.
The math (for one rep running vendor programs):
- 3 vendor programs × consistent flow = ~30 applications per quarter
- 30 applications × 75% approval-to-funding (ROI-qualified, term-matched) = ~22 funded deals
- Average ticket on ROI-framed deals runs 30-50% higher than payment-quoted deals — buyers right-size to the asset, not the cheapest payment
- A single embedded vendor program throws off repeat flow quarter after quarter — acquisition cost approaches zero after onboarding
- End-of-term buyouts and upgrades create a second sale on the same asset, doubling lifetime value per customer
Common equipment-finance objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"My bank's line is cheaper."* — "It might be — but every dollar you draw on the line is a dollar not available for payroll or the next opportunity. This financing keeps your line free."
- *"I'd rather just pay cash."* — "You can. But would you rather own a depreciating machine, or own the cash and let the machine's earnings cover the payment?"
- *"The captive lender offered 0%."* — "If their subsidized rate genuinely wins, take it — I won't lie to you. Where I win is on used equipment, mixed deals, and speed the captive won't touch."
- *"Leasing means I never own it."* — "Not with a $1 buyout structure — you own it outright at term end. Let me show you the difference between that and a fair-market-value lease."
Have each rep name their three vendor programs and next month's approval-speed review before they leave.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each rep leaves with four written commitments, taped to their monitor:
- I quantify the asset's revenue and the cost of not having it before I ever quote a payment.
- I match the term to the asset's useful life — short structures for fast-obsoleting gear, longer for durable machinery.
- My three vendor programs are named, with a monthly approval-speed and value review scheduled for each.
- I disclose every fee, the buyout, and any insurance requirement — and route all tax questions to the buyer's CPA.
Close by reading the equipment-finance truth aloud: *"Nobody remembers the rate on a machine that paid for itself. They remember the rep who showed them it would."* Then pin the ROI discovery script and the vendor-program list in the team channel.
FAQ
Q1: How do I sell against a manufacturer's subsidized 0% captive rate? A: Don't fight it head-on when it genuinely wins — you'll lose at funding and damage trust. Win on used equipment, mixed-vendor deals, faster turnaround, and structures the captive won't do. Be honest when the captive is the better deal; you'll earn the next one.
Q2: When is a lease better than a loan for the buyer? A: A lease (especially fair-market-value) suits fast-obsoleting assets like IT, where the buyer wants to upgrade and avoid residual risk; a $1-buyout lease or term loan suits durable machinery they'll keep. Match the structure to useful life and the buyer's tax and ownership goals — and confirm tax treatment with their CPA.
Q3: Can I tell a buyer they'll get the Section 179 deduction? A: No — you can explain that Section 179 and bonus depreciation may apply and that many equipment buyers use them, but the limits and eligibility depend on the buyer's tax situation. Always route the specific claim to their CPA; never promise a deduction.
Q4: What's a realistic approval-to-funding rate? A: Payment-quoting reps often see 40-55% of approvals actually fund; ROI-qualified, term-matched pipelines run 70-80%, because weak and mismatched deals get re-structured or walked before submission.
Q5: How do I get a vendor program off the ground? A: Win on speed and reliability, train the vendor's salespeople to present financing as a feature, supply co-branded paperwork and a simple rate card, and protect their brand with a clean buyer experience. One well-run program out-produces dozens of cold prospects.
Q6: What's the most common structuring mistake? A: Mismatching term to useful life — financing fast-obsoleting equipment on a long term, or durable machinery too short. The structure should expire roughly when the asset's earning power does, and the buyout should match whether the buyer wants ownership.
Sources
- Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA), *Survey of Equipment Finance Activity* and *State of the Industry Report*, elfaonline.org, 2024-2025.
- Equipment Leasing & Finance Foundation, *Equipment Finance Industry Outlook*, leasefoundation.org, current edition.
- Internal Revenue Service, *IRS Section 179 Deduction and Bonus Depreciation* (Publication 946), irs.gov, current tax year.
- Sudhir Amembal, *Winning With Leasing*, Amembal & Associates (equipment finance structuring reference).
- Aaron Ross and Marylou Tyler, *Predictable Revenue*, PebbleStorm, 2011 (vendor and pipeline discipline).
- National Equipment Finance Association (NEFA), *Funding and Vendor Program Best Practices*, nefassociation.org.
- FASB, *ASC 842 Lease Accounting Standard* (true lease vs finance lease classification), fasb.org.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and FTC, *Truth in Leasing and Commercial Disclosure* guidance.