Commercial Plumbing Service Agreement Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Preventive Agreement Close is a 60-minute training for commercial plumbing service reps who sell scheduled preventive-maintenance (PM) agreements to facility managers, building owners, and multi-site property groups — not one-off repairs. The session teaches a four-part ritual: walk the mechanical room and quantify downtime risk, price the agreement against the cost of one emergency flood, present a tiered multi-site agreement, and close on an auto-renew annual contract.
Built on the PHCC (Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors National Association) commercial-services discipline, the ASA (American Supply Association) channel norms, and BOMA (Building Owners and Managers Association) facility-risk language, this training shows a rep how to convert a reactive account into recurring contracted revenue.
Section 1 — Why One-Off Repairs Are a Losing Game (5 min)
Open with the economics on the whiteboard. A reactive commercial plumbing account calls you only when something fails — a backed-up grease interceptor, a burst riser, a failed backflow device. You compete on price and response time every single call, your truck rolls are unpredictable, and the facility blames *you* for the emergency you didn't cause.
A PM agreement account is the opposite. Set the frame out loud:
- The reactive account: You're a vendor. You bid every job. Margin gets squeezed. The facility shops you against three other shops on every emergency.
- The PM agreement account: You're the building's plumber of record. Scheduled visits, predictable revenue, first-call rights on emergencies, and a documented inspection trail that protects the owner.
- The number that matters: One unscheduled sewer backup or burst supply line in a commercial kitchen or multi-tenant building routinely runs $8,000-$45,000 in water remediation, lost tenant rent, and business interruption — before your invoice.
Read the PHCC commercial-services principle aloud: *"You are not selling plumbing visits. You are selling the absence of an emergency."* The facility manager's real fear is the 2 a.m. Call from a tenant standing in three inches of water. Sell to that fear, with a documented plan that removes it.
Section 2 — The Mechanical-Room Walk and Risk Brief (15 min)
The agreement is built from a documented walk, not a phone quote. The rep walks the building with the facility manager, photographs the assets, and fills out a verbatim risk brief on the spot. No walk, no agreement. Have reps fill this out for a real account right now.
Verbatim PM Risk Brief (rep fills out during the walk, with the FM):
- Site: [Building name] — [Square footage] — [Number of tenants/units] — [Single site or multi-site count]
- Critical assets I inventoried: [Backflow preventers, water heaters, grease interceptors, sump pumps, sewer ejectors, mixing valves, main shutoffs]
- Highest-risk failure point: [The one asset whose failure floods the building or shuts down operations]
- Cost of that failure if it happens unscheduled: [Remediation + downtime + tenant impact, in dollars]
- Code/compliance items due: [Annual backflow test, grease-trap pumping cadence, water-heater inspection]
- Recommended visit cadence: [Quarterly / semi-annual / monthly for high-risk multi-site]
Coach the "one highest-risk asset" rule — borrowed from BOMA facility-risk practice. Do not overwhelm the FM with a 40-line asset list. Name the one thing that floods the building and anchor the whole agreement to protecting it. Everything else is supporting detail.
Show the bad example: *"We'll come out twice a year and check things."* That's not an agreement — that's a vague promise the FM can't justify to ownership.
Section 3 — Walking the Building Without Killing the Deal (10 min)
The walk is where reps lose deals by talking like a technician instead of a risk advisor. Drill the discipline.
- Lead with the asset, not the wrench. Point at the backflow preventer and ask *"When was this last certified?"* — not *"We can rebuild this."*
- Photograph everything. Photos are your evidence at the owner presentation. A picture of a corroded grease interceptor sells the agreement better than any brochure.
- Tie every finding to a dollar and a date. "This sump pump has no backup. If it fails during a storm, the basement floods — that's $20K and three days down."
- Find the compliance gap. Most commercial buildings are behind on annual backflow testing — that's a code violation and an instant agreement justification.
- Note who actually signs. The FM walks with you; the owner or asset manager approves the dollars. Identify both.
What to NEVER say on the walk (read aloud, slowly):
- "This is all pretty old, you should just replace everything." (sounds like a sales grab; kills trust)
- "Don't worry, it's probably fine." (you just talked yourself out of the agreement)
- "We're the cheapest in town." (anchors you on price; PM agreements never win on price)
- "I'll email you a quote later." (the deal dies in the inbox; quote from the walk)
- "Your last plumber did this wrong." (trashing the incumbent makes the FM defensive)
- Anything promising a fixed multi-year price without an annual escalator — material costs move; bake in a review clause or you eat the margin.
The PHCC field-service rule is blunt: on the walk you are a risk inspector, not a parts salesman. The agreement sells itself when the FM sees the risk in their own building.
Section 4 — The Owner Presentation and Close (10 min)
Run the close with the decision-maker present — the FM alone cannot approve recurring spend at most facilities. Use the verbatim script.
Verbatim Agreement Close Script (rep opens with these exact words):
Rep: "Here's what we found in your building. Your single biggest exposure is the main sewer ejector with no backup alarm — if it fails unscheduled, you're looking at roughly $22,000 in remediation and two days of tenant disruption."
[Lay the photos on the table. Stay silent. Let the owner look.]
Owner: [reacts to the photos]
Rep: "Our preventive agreement puts us on a quarterly cadence: we inspect that ejector, test your backflow for code, pump the interceptor on schedule, and you get first-call priority on any emergency at a locked labor rate."
[Slide the tiered agreement across. Point to the recommended tier, not the cheapest.]
Rep: "Most buildings your size go with the Quarterly tier at [$X/year]. That's less than one emergency flood, spread across the year, and it keeps you in compliance. Should we start the first visit this month or next?"
[Assumptive close. Stop talking. Let them pick a start date.]
Do NOT:
- Present only one price — always show three tiers so the owner is choosing *how much* protection, not *whether* to buy.
- Quote a monthly number when the value is annual — frame the agreement against one emergency, not a small monthly fee they'll cut.
- Leave without a signed start date or a hard next step — a "send me the paperwork" is a stall, not a yes.
Section 5 — The Multi-Site Agreement Math (15 min)
The biggest commercial plumbing money is in portfolios — a property group with 12 buildings, a restaurant chain with 30 locations, a school district with 8 campuses. Build the cadence on the whiteboard.
The math (for a 10-building property portfolio):
- 10 sites × quarterly visits = 40 PM visits per year
- Standard per-site agreement: $2,400/year → 10 sites = $24,000/year recurring
- Add first-call emergency labor at a locked rate — historically $30,000-$60,000/year in captured repair work that used to go to whoever answered the phone fastest.
- A single multi-site portfolio is worth $50K-$85K/year in combined contracted plus captured revenue — versus chasing one $400 emergency at a time.
ASA channel data shows the multi-site owner values one invoice, one point of contact, and one compliance record across the portfolio more than a 5% per-site discount. Sell the simplicity, then add the discount.
Common owner objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"We just call you when something breaks — why pay in advance?"* — Because the break costs you $22K and a tenant lawsuit. The agreement costs you $2,400 and prevents it.
- *"Your competitor bid lower."* — On a one-time fix, maybe. Ask them who carries your compliance documentation and answers your emergency call first. That's not in their bid.
- *"Can you do month-to-month?"* — No. Preventive maintenance only works on a cadence. Month-to-month is just reactive with extra paperwork. We do annual auto-renew.
Have each rep map a real multi-site target in their territory before they leave the room — name the owner and the building count.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each rep leaves with three written commitments, taped to their truck dashboard:
- One mechanical-room walk is booked with a named facility manager this week.
- One multi-site portfolio target is identified, with the owner named and building count estimated.
- Every agreement I present shows three tiers and is framed against the cost of one emergency — never as a small monthly fee.
Close by reading the PHCC commercial-services principle aloud one more time: *"The reactive plumber bids forever. The preventive plumber gets renewed forever."*
Then pin the PM risk-brief template and the tiered agreement sheet in the team's shared drive before the room clears.
FAQ
Q1: What if the facility manager wants the agreement but the owner won't approve the spend? A: Then you present to the owner — never close recurring spend with someone who can't authorize it. Use the FM as your internal champion and your photo evidence as the business case. The BOMA risk framing is built for owners, not facility staff.
Q2: How do I price an agreement when I don't know what I'll find on each visit? A: Price the scheduled inspection and required code work in the agreement; price discovered repairs at a locked, pre-agreed labor rate. The owner gets predictability on PM and transparency on repairs.
Q3: What if the building already has a plumber? A: Most incumbents are reactive, not contracted. Find the compliance gap — usually overdue backflow testing or no documented inspection trail — and lead with the risk the incumbent isn't covering.
Q4: Is a single-site agreement worth my time, or only multi-site? A: Single-site high-risk buildings (restaurants, medical, multi-tenant) are absolutely worth it. Multi-site is where the portfolio revenue compounds, but a $2,400 single-site agreement still beats chasing emergencies.
Q5: How often should the cadence actually be — quarterly, semi-annual? A: Risk-based. Grease-heavy commercial kitchens and high-occupancy buildings warrant quarterly or monthly; lower-risk office buildings can run semi-annual. The walk and the risk brief decide it, not a default.
Q6: How is this different from a residential service-plan upsell? A: Residential plans upsell a homeowner on a discount membership. Commercial PM agreements sell an owner or portfolio on documented risk reduction, code compliance, and business-interruption protection — different buyer, different stakes, different dollars.
Sources
- Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors National Association (PHCC), *Commercial Service Contracting Resources*, phccweb.org, 2024-2025.
- American Supply Association (ASA), *Channel and Contractor Profitability Reports*, asa.net, 2024.
- Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA International), *Building Operating Cost Benchmarks and Risk Standards*, boma.org, 2024.
- Mechanical Contractors Association of America (MCAA), *Service Contracting Best Practices*, mcaa.org, 2023-2024.
- International Code Council (ICC), *Uniform Plumbing Code — Backflow and Cross-Connection Requirements*, 2024 edition.
- Plumber Magazine, *Offering Plumbing Maintenance Contracts*, plumbermag.com, 2024.
- PHCP Pros, *Commercial Service Agreement Field Guides*, phcppros.com, 2024.
- Mike Weinberg, *New Sales. Simplified.*, AMACOM, 2013.