New-Construction Builder Sales — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Model-Home Discovery Reset is a 60-minute training for new-home community sales counselors who sell builder inventory and to-be-built homes onsite. It replaces the "tour the model and quote a base price" habit with a four-part ritual: a buyer-motivation discovery before the tour, a structured options-and-upgrades walk, a build-timeline expectation lock, and a lot-plus-incentive close that uses the builder's monthly numbers.
Built on the NAHB "Complete New Home Salesperson" curriculum, the Institute of Residential Marketing (IRM) designation standards, and Myers Barnes' "Reach the Top in New Home & Neighborhood Sales," this session teaches counselors to qualify motivation before they ever open the model door.
Section 1 — Why Onsite Selling Is Different (5 min)
Open with the hard truth. A new-home counselor is not a Realtor showing resale — you sell a product that does not exist yet, on a timeline the buyer cannot control, with a price that moves every month the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) publishes incentive data.
As of 2026, 65% of builders are offering buyer incentives — rate buydowns, closing-cost credits, design-center allowances — the 14th straight month above 60%. That means your buyer walked in expecting a deal, and your job is to anchor on the home, not the discount.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The old model tour: Counselor greets, walks the model, recites the base price, hands over a flyer, hopes they come back.
- The new model tour: Motivation qualified first. Options framed as lifestyle, not line items. Timeline set honestly. Lot and incentive closed with this month's real math.
- Cadence target: Every up gets a discovery before the tour — no exceptions, even walk-ins.
End the segment by reading the NAHB selling axiom aloud: *"You are not selling square footage. You are selling the life that happens inside it."*
Section 2 — Motivation Discovery Before the Tour (15 min)
The discovery is a seated conversation at the sales desk before you open the model. No brief, no tour. Most counselors lose the sale because they walk the home before they know why the buyer is standing in front of them. Walk the room through the verbatim template — have counselors role-play it with a partner right now.
Verbatim Discovery Template (counselor fills out at the desk, before the tour):
- Why now: [What changed — new baby, job relocation, lease ending, downsizing? Get the date.]
- Current home: [Own or rent? Must they sell first? When does the lease end?]
- Buying group: [Who decides? Is the decision-maker in the room today?]
- Must-haves vs nice-to-haves: [Bedrooms, single-story, home office, yard for the dog?]
- Timeline pressure: [When do they NEED to be in? This sets quick-move-in vs to-be-built.]
- Budget conversation: [Have they talked to our preferred lender? Pre-qualified amount?]
Coach the counselors on the "date, not someday" rule — a buyer with no move date is a tire-kicker until proven otherwise. If they say *"just looking,"* ask: *"Looking for a move this year, or planning ahead for next?"* The answer routes them.
Show the bad example: *"Let me show you our beautiful model and then we can talk numbers."* That is a tour, not a sale.
Section 3 — The Options and Upgrades Walk (10 min)
This is where margin lives and where counselors leak it. The design center and structural options carry the builder's strongest margins, but only if you frame them as lifestyle decisions, not a price menu. Drill the language.
- Frame structural first. A morning room or extended garage cannot be added later — sell those at contract, not the design center.
- Anchor to their discovery. They told you they work from home. Walk them to the flex room: *"This is your office."*
- Use the allowance, don't hide it. If the incentive is a design-center credit, spend it in front of them on what they already love.
- Show the model's upgrades honestly. Tell them what is standard and what is upgraded — surprise pricing kills trust at contract.
- Tier the conversation. Good / better / best on flooring and countertops, not 40 SKUs at once.
What to NEVER say during the options walk (read these aloud, slowly):
- "You can always upgrade that later" (false for structural options; destroys urgency and trust)
- "The base price is X" (anchors them low; quote the home they actually want)
- "Everything you see in the model is included" (sets up a brutal surprise at the design center)
- "It's only a few dollars more a month" (minimizing language; insults a six-figure decision)
- "I'm not sure what that upgrade costs" (kills your authority; know your top 10 options cold)
- Anything promising a price hold without writing it (incentives change monthly per NAHB data — never verbal)
The IRM designation standard is blunt: in the options walk your job is to be a lifestyle guide, translating their discovery answers into rooms — not a cashier reading a price sheet.
Section 4 — The Build-Timeline Expectation Lock (10 min)
The number-one source of new-home buyer anger is a timeline that slips. You prevent the cancellation at the sales desk, not at the framing inspection. Run the timeline conversation using the verbatim script.
Verbatim Timeline Script (counselor sets expectations with these exact words):
Counselor: "Let me walk you through exactly how this works, because the worst thing I can do is surprise you. From contract to keys on a to-be-built home, we're targeting [X] months. Here's where it can move."
[Counselor points to a printed build-stage sheet: permit, foundation, framing, drywall, final.]
Counselor: "Two things move a date: weather and municipal inspections. Neither of us controls those. What I control is telling you the truth at every stage."
[Counselor pauses. Lets the buyer absorb. Does not over-promise.]
Counselor: "We do a pre-construction meeting, a pre-drywall walk, and a final orientation. You'll see your home three times before closing."
Counselor: "If your lease ends [date], let's talk about whether a quick-move-in home is the safer bet for your timeline."
Per NAHB's New Homes Month guidance, the handoff between the online sales counselor and the onsite team is where most timeline confusion starts — so confirm what the buyer was already told before you reset the clock.
Do NOT:
- Quote a closing date you cannot defend ("end of summer" instead of a real target with a buffer).
- Skip the lease-end / rate-lock math — a buyer whose lock expires before closing is a cancellation waiting to happen.
- Promise to "push" the construction team — counselors who interfere with the build calendar lose credibility on both sides.
Section 5 — The Lot and Incentive Close (15 min)
Build the close on the whiteboard. This is the part nervous counselors rush — and why so many leave the office "to think about it" and never return.
The math (a real 2026 incentive scenario on a $480,000 home):
- Builder rate buydown to 5.25% vs market 6.75% saves roughly $420/month on a $440,000 loan.
- That's about $5,040/year — and the buydown costs the buyer nothing out of pocket because the builder funds it.
- A $15,000 closing-cost credit plus a design-center allowance moves the buyer's cash-to-close down by real dollars they can see today.
- Frame it as: *"This home is $480,000. With this month's incentives, your monthly is the same as a $445,000 home with no help — but the incentive expires the last of the month."*
Common buyer objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"We want to wait for prices to drop."* — NAHB data shows builders are using incentives, not base-price cuts. The help is now, and it expires monthly.
- *"We need to sell our house first."* — Let's talk to our preferred lender about a bridge or a contingency — and let's reserve the lot so you don't lose it while you list.
- *"Let me think about it."* — Of course. While you think, do you want me to hold this lot for 24 hours, or release it to the next buyer asking about it?
Have each counselor practice presenting this month's actual incentive sheet out loud before they leave the room. No exit without a clean close delivered to a partner.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each counselor leaves with three written commitments, taped to the sales desk:
- Every up gets a seated discovery before I open the model door, starting tomorrow.
- I will know my top 10 options and their prices cold — no "let me check" during a tour.
- I will quote this month's real incentive math on every close, and never promise a price hold verbally.
Close by reading Myers Barnes' rule aloud: *"The new-home sale is won at the discovery desk and lost at the model door — never the other way around."*
Then post the community's current incentive sheet and build-stage timeline at the sales desk for the week.
FAQ
Q1: What if the buyer refuses the seated discovery and just wants to walk the model? A: Let them walk, then catch them at the desk on the way out. But most "just looking" buyers will sit if you say, *"Give me two minutes so I show you the right home, not every home."* The NAHB curriculum treats discovery as non-negotiable.
Q2: How do I handle a buyer who is clearly out of budget? A: Route them honestly. Show a smaller plan or a quick-move-in with the incentive applied. A counselor who burns 40 minutes on an unqualified buyer loses the qualified up walking in the door.
Q3: Should I quote the base price at all? A: Only as a starting anchor, then immediately move to the home they actually want with realistic options. Buyers who fall in love with a base-price home and then see the real number at the design center cancel.
Q4: What if construction slips after I locked the timeline? A: You communicate immediately and honestly at the next build stage. The lock is about setting expectations and a buffer, not a guarantee you control weather. Honesty at framing prevents cancellation at drywall.
Q5: How is this different from selling resale real estate? A: Resale is a fixed product you negotiate. New construction is a product you co-create on a builder's timeline with monthly-changing incentives. The selling motion is closer to consultative product sales than traditional brokerage.
Q6: Do incentives really expire monthly? A: Often yes — builders adjust rate buydowns and credits based on monthly absorption and the NAHB Housing Market Index. Confirm your community's current sheet weekly so your urgency is real, not manufactured.
Sources
- National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), *The Complete New Home Salesperson* course and *New Homes Month* sales materials, nahb.org, 2026.
- Myers Barnes, *Reach the Top in New Home & Neighborhood Sales*, Myers Barnes Associates, 2018 edition.
- NAHB / Wells Fargo, *Housing Market Index (HMI) and Builder Incentive Data*, May 2026.
- Institute of Residential Marketing (IRM), *Certified New Home Sales Professional (CSP) designation standards*, NAHB Education.
- Bob Schultz, *The Official Handbook for New Home Salespeople*, New Home Specialist Inc., 2012.
- National Sales & Marketing Council (NSMC), NAHB, *The Nationals new-home sales best-practice awards*, 2025.
- Jeff Shore, *Be Bold and Win the Sale*, McGraw-Hill, 2014.
- Zillow / NAHB, *New Construction Buyer Behavior and Incentive Trends Report*, 2026.