Tree Service Estimate Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The On-Site Risk-to-Estimate Close is a 60-minute training for tree service estimators — the climbers, crew leads, and sales arborists who walk a homeowner's property and quote removals, large-limb pruning, and storm work — who must sell safety and value over a lowball price and book the job before the next bidder shows up.
It teaches a four-part field ritual: perform a visible risk assessment the homeowner can follow, separate professional rigging from "a guy with a chainsaw," present a clear scope with cleanup and protection included, and schedule on the spot. Built on TCIA (Tree Care Industry Association) safety standards, ISA (International Society of Arboriculture) certified-arborist practice, and ANSI A300 pruning standards, this session turns a free estimate into a signed, scheduled, fairly priced job.
Section 1 — Why Tree Estimating Is Different (5 min)
Open by naming it: a homeowner cannot judge tree work, so they default to the lowest number until you give them a better way to decide. Two estimators quote the same oak: one at $1,800, one at $3,400. The homeowner sees "same tree, double the price" — unless the higher bidder showed them the risk, the rigging, and the cleanup that justify it.
You are not selling tree removal. You are selling a safe outcome and a clean yard.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The old estimate: Estimator glances up, scribbles a number on a door-hanger, says "call me," leaves. Homeowner price-shops. The cheapest uninsured guy wins — until he drops a limb on the roof.
- The new field ritual: Walk the risk. Show the hazards. Explain the rigging and crew. Price the full scope with cleanup. Schedule on site.
- The reality: A complex removal near a house, with ISA-certified climbers, rigging, and proper insurance, costs more than a cowboy with a ladder — and it should. Your value is that the limb lands where you decide, not where gravity decides.
Read the TCIA safety principle aloud: *"Tree work is among the most hazardous occupations; trained crews and proper equipment protect the worker, the property, and the public."* You sell that protection.
Section 2 — The On-Site Risk Assessment (15 min)
The walk IS the sale. Estimators who quote from the curb lose to lowballers. Estimators who walk the property with the homeowner, pointing out hazards and targets, close at a premium. Rehearse the walk.
Verbatim Risk-Assessment Brief (estimator fills out while walking the property):
- Tree and condition: [species, approx height/DBH, dead/declining/storm-damaged/healthy]
- Targets within fall radius: [house, roof, power lines, fence, neighbor's property, vehicles, play set]
- The hazard I point out to the homeowner: [e.g., "This dead leader hangs directly over your bedroom — that's why this is a rigging job, not a fell-and-drop"]
- The method this requires: [crane / climb-and-rig / bucket / directional fell] and crew size
- The scope I'm quoting: [removal/pruning + stump + haul-off + cleanup + lawn protection]
- The proof I show: [Certificate of Insurance, ISA Certified Arborist credential, recent job photos]
Coach the "point at the target" rule — physically walk the homeowner under the tree and point at the house, the line, the fence. ISA risk assessment is target-based; so is your pitch. Say: *"See how that limb hangs right over your sunroom? That's what we're protecting — that's why we rig it down in sections instead of dropping it."*
Show the bad approach: *"Yeah I can do that tree, gimme three grand."* That is a number with no story. The homeowner has nothing to weigh it against except a cheaper number.
Section 3 — Selling Safety and Value Over the Lowball (10 min)
This is where estimators win or lose against the cheap bid. The homeowner's silent question is *"Why are you more expensive?"* Answer it before they ask, with hazards and credentials, not by trashing the other guy.
- Lead with the Certificate of Insurance. "If an uninsured crew drops a limb on your roof, that's *your* homeowner's policy. With us, it's ours." This single fact reframes price instantly.
- Name the crew and method. "Three-person crew, ISA Certified Arborist on site, rigged down in sections." Specificity signals professionalism.
- Quantify the targets. Tie price to what's protected: roof, lines, fence, the neighbor's car.
- Include the full scope visibly. Stump grinding, haul-off, lawn protection, cleanup — the lowball usually leaves stumps and ruts.
- Show recent photos of similar jobs done clean. Proof beats promises.
What to NEVER say on a tree estimate (read these aloud, slowly):
- "The other guys will probably do it cheaper." (you just sent them shopping — never sell against yourself)
- "It's an easy tree, no big deal." (kills your premium; if it's easy, why are you $3,400?)
- "Don't worry about insurance." (the COI is your single strongest closing tool — never wave it off)
- "We'll just drop it and see." (signals reckless cowboy work, the exact thing you charge to avoid)
- "That price is firm, take it or leave it." (adversarial; explain value instead of issuing ultimatums)
- "I think that limb is fine." when you're unsure (never guess on a hazard you'd be liable for — flag it or decline)
The TCIA standard is clear: trained crews, proper PPE, and insurance are not optional extras — they are the job. Sell them as the reason you cost more and the reason nothing goes wrong.
Section 4 — The Scope Presentation and Scheduling (10 min)
Now the close. Present the written scope, show the proof, and book the date while you're standing in the yard. Use the verbatim script.
Verbatim Scope Presentation Script (estimator presents, then schedules):
Estimator: "Here's exactly what we'll do." [hand over written estimate] "Remove the dead oak in sections by rigging — nothing free-falls toward your roof. Grind the stump four inches below grade, haul off all wood and debris, rake the beds, and lay plywood to protect your lawn from the truck."
Estimator: "Here's our Certificate of Insurance and my ISA Certified Arborist number — verify both before you ever let a crew on your property, mine or anyone's."
[Show two photos: similar tree before, clean yard after. Stay quiet while they look.]
Estimator: "We've got a crew opening Thursday. If we lock it now I can hold that slot and you're on the schedule ahead of the next storm. Want me to put you down?"
[Hand them the estimate and the pen. Quiet.]
Do NOT:
- Leave the scope vague — "trim the tree" invites a fight over what was included. Spell out cleanup, stump, and haul-off in writing.
- Quote without showing the COI — it's the fastest way to justify being the higher, safer bid.
- Walk away with "I'll think about it" and no scheduled date. Offer a specific crew slot to create a real decision.
Section 5 — The Math, Urgency, and Objections (15 min)
Build the urgency on real numbers. The homeowner thinks a tree can wait. Show them what the storm and the cheap crew actually cost.
The math (typical residential tree decision):
- A mid-size pruning runs $400 to $1,200; a straightforward removal runs $800 to $2,500.
- A large hazard removal near a house with rigging runs $2,500 to $6,000+; crane-assisted removals scale higher.
- Stump grinding adds $150 to $500 per stump; full haul-off and cleanup is often $300-$800 of real labor the lowball quietly skips.
- An uninsured crew dropping a limb on a roof can mean $10,000 to $40,000 in roof and structural repair — billed to the *homeowner's* policy. Your COI is worth thousands in avoided risk.
- On-site close rate when you walk the risk and show the COI runs 50 to 65%; curb-side numbers close under 25%. The walk and the COI are the job.
Common tree-service objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"The other guy is way cheaper."* — "He might be. Ask him for his Certificate of Insurance and his ISA number. If he's uninsured and a limb hits your roof, that's your policy and your deductible. That gap is the price difference."
- *"Can't I just let it go another year?"* — "You can, but that dead leader over your bedroom doesn't get safer — the next storm decides for you, and emergency work costs double under pressure."
- *"Why is stump grinding extra?"* — "It's a separate machine and a separate pass. I quote it line by line so you see exactly what you're paying for — the cheap bid usually leaves you the stump."
- *"That seems high for one tree."* — "It's one tree hanging over your house with power lines in the drop zone. You're paying a trained, insured crew to rig it down so nothing lands where it shouldn't. That's the whole point."
Have each estimator practice the insurance reframe out loud before they leave the room.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each estimator leaves with three written commitments, taped to their truck dash:
- I walk the property and point at the targets with every homeowner — no curb-side numbers.
- I show my Certificate of Insurance and ISA credential on every estimate.
- I quote the full written scope — removal, stump, haul-off, cleanup, lawn protection — and offer a real crew date on site.
Close by reading the ANSI A300 standard aloud: *"Tree care operations shall be performed to recognized standards by qualified personnel."* You are the qualified personnel — price like it and act like it.
Then send the room out with the written-scope estimate pads and current Certificates of Insurance in every truck.
FAQ
Q1: How do I justify being more expensive than the cheap bid? A: Lead with the Certificate of Insurance and the ISA Certified Arborist credential, then tie price to the targets you're protecting and the cleanup you include. The homeowner isn't paying for a number — they're paying for the limb landing where your crew decides.
Q2: Should I quote from the curb to save time? A: No. The walk is the sale. Pointing at the house, the power lines, and the fence is what lets the homeowner weigh your price against the risk instead of against a cheaper number.
Q3: What if the homeowner only wants the tree dropped, no cleanup? A: Quote it both ways in writing, but explain that the lowball that "drops and leaves" sticks them with hauling, ruts, and a stump. Most choose the full scope once they see what's missing from the cheap version.
Q4: How do I handle a genuinely hazardous tree the homeowner wants to ignore? A: Document the hazard, point it out specifically, and put your recommendation in writing. Per TCIA and ISA practice, you flag it honestly — and you do not guess on a defect you'd be liable for.
Q5: Is it worth pushing for a same-day signature? A: Yes — offer a specific crew date to create a real decision. "I'll think about it" with no date is a price-shop. A held Thursday slot ahead of storm season is a reason to sign now.
Q6: What's the single biggest mistake new estimators make? A: Selling against themselves by mentioning the cheaper competitor or calling the job "easy." Both erase your premium. Sell the risk you remove and the proof you carry, not the other guy's price.
Sources
- TCIA (Tree Care Industry Association), *ANSI Z133 Safety Standard for Arboricultural Operations* and Accreditation Program, tcia.org, 2024.
- ISA (International Society of Arboriculture), *Certified Arborist Credential* and *Tree Risk Assessment Qualification (TRAQ)*, isa-arbor.com, 2024.
- American National Standards Institute, *ANSI A300 Standards for Tree Care Operations (Pruning, Removal, Risk Assessment)*, 2023.
- ISA, *Best Management Practices: Tree Risk Assessment*, second edition, 2017.
- OSHA, *Logging and Tree Care Operations Safety Guidance (29 CFR 1910)*, osha.gov, 2024.
- Tom Reber, *The Contractor Fight* sales and pricing training, thecontractorfight.com, 2024.
- ArborMaster, *Professional Tree Climbing and Rigging Training Curriculum*, 2023.
- National Arborist standards reference: Dr. Alex Shigo, *A New Tree Biology*, Shigo and Trees Associates, 1991.