Payroll and PEO Services Selling to SMB — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
Payroll and PEO Services Selling to SMB is a 60-minute training for ADP, Paychex, Justworks, Gusto, Rippling, Insperity, and TriNet sellers pitching $40-$200 per-employee-per-month bundles of payroll, benefits, workers comp, and HR. Reps learn a 3-pain discovery (payroll errors, benefits-too-expensive, HR risk), a verbatim explanation of the PEO co-employment model, a whiteboard ROI proof using the NAPEO 27.2% ROI and 7-9% faster growth stats, a 90-day implementation timeline that respects the Q4-vs-January transition window, and a same-quarter-savings close that converts owners who finally see Fortune-500-grade benefits at SMB pricing.
Section 1 — Why SMBs Buy PEO (5 min)
Open with the trigger events. SMBs almost never wake up and decide to buy a PEO. They get pushed by one of three pains:
- A payroll error — wrong tax withholding, missed quarterly filing, a 941 penalty letter from the IRS.
- A benefits-renewal shock — health-insurance broker quotes a 22% renewal increase on a 14-life plan.
- An HR scare — a wrongful-termination threat, a harassment complaint, or a misclassified 1099.
Cite the data live. NAPEO (National Association of Professional Employer Organizations) reports the PEO industry is $414B+ in revenue, serves 200,000+ SMBs and 4.5M worksite employees, with 500 PEOs operating in the US. PEO clients grow 7-9% faster, have 10-14% lower turnover, and are 50% less likely to go out of business year-over-year.
The average annual ROI is 27.2% per NAPEO's McBassi & Co. Analysis. SHRM confirms HR-compliance risk is the #1 unbudgeted cost for SMBs under 100 headcount.
Frame the room: *"We are not selling payroll. We are selling Fortune-500 benefits, IRS compliance, and the end of HR being the owner's second full-time job — at SMB pricing."*
Section 2 — The 3-Pain Discovery (15 min)
Every SMB prospect is sitting on at least one of three live pains. The verbatim template surfaces all three in under 12 minutes.
Verbatim 3-Pain Discovery Template:
- Opener: "Before I show you anything, walk me through how payroll actually runs today — who clicks the button, what platform, how many people get paid?"
- Pain 1 — Payroll errors: "When was your last payroll error or tax-notice letter from the IRS or state? Who handles the 941s, the W-2s, the 1099s, the new-state-tax-ID setup when you hire across a state line?"
- Pain 2 — Benefits cost: "What did your health-insurance renewal quote come in at this year? Are you on a small-group plan, a level-funded plan, or no plan at all? How many of your people would leave for a job with better benefits?"
- Pain 3 — HR risk: "When was the last time you had to fire someone? Do you have written job descriptions, an employee handbook, a documented PIP process? Who's your designated HR person?"
- The PEO frame: "What I'd suggest is co-employment — we become the employer of record for tax, benefits, and HR; you keep 100% control of day-to-day. You inherit our 4.5-million-life benefits buying power and a credentialed HR team — for a per-employee-per-month fee. Want me to walk through the model?"
- The discovery-to-quote bridge: "Send me your last benefits renewal, your current payroll register, and a headcount roster. I'll come back in 5 business days with hard numbers — better benefits, lower comp, and the per-employee math."
Section 3 — The PEO Co-Employment Explanation (10 min)
Most SMB owners hear "PEO" and think "staffing agency" or "we lose control." Kill that confusion in 90 seconds with the verbatim co-employment script — every rep memorizes it.
The model:
- You stay the employer of record for day-to-day — hiring, firing, pay rates, schedules, performance reviews. The PEO does not run your business.
- PEO becomes co-employer for IRS, benefits, and HR-administration purposes — your team gets a new EIN on their W-2 (the PEO's), payroll taxes are filed under the PEO's FEIN.
- You inherit the PEO's master health plan — typically a 4.5M-life pool (per NAPEO), which is why benefits are 20-40% cheaper than what a 25-life SMB can buy on its own.
- Workers comp is bundled and pay-as-you-go — no annual audit shock.
- HR services — handbook, training, termination support, harassment investigations — included.
What to NEVER say in front of a prospect (read aloud, slowly):
- "You lose control of your employees." (Wrong. Co-employment is a tax-and-benefits construct, not a management one.)
- "We're the same as ADP / Paychex / Gusto." (Generic payroll is not PEO. PEO is co-employment. Confusing the two kills your differentiation.)
- "It's just like outsourcing HR." (Undersells the IRS-and-benefits leverage. PEO is bigger than HR outsourcing.)
- "Don't worry about the IRS Section 105 / 125 rules." (Worry. Owners need to know cafeteria-plan rules apply, and the PEO handles them.)
- "You can cancel anytime, no problem." (Always check the contract — most PEOs have a 30-90 day off-boarding window, especially mid-plan-year.)
- "Your premiums will never go up." (They will, every year. Sell the *delta* vs the standalone small-group market, not a flat promise.)
Anchor the explanation on the IRS Section 105 (HRA) and Section 125 (cafeteria plan) rules — these are the tax-advantaged frameworks that make PEO benefits cheaper than standalone. Owners trust reps who name the IRS code.
Section 4 — The ROI Proposal Script (10 min)
Run this verbatim once you have the prospect's payroll register, benefits renewal, and headcount roster.
Verbatim ROI Proposal Script:
Rep: "Here's what I built from your numbers. You have 28 employees. Your current health-insurance renewal came in at $1,180 per-employee-per-month family-tier. On our master plan, the comparable BlueCross plan runs $890 per-employee-per-month. That's $290/EE/mo × 28 = $8,120/mo, or $97,440/yr in healthcare savings alone."
Rep: "Workers comp — you're paying $52K/yr on your standalone policy. On our pay-as-you-go bundle, modified-rate-adjusted, you'll run about $38K. That's $14K/yr saved, with no annual audit."
Rep: "Our PEO fee is $135 per-employee-per-month × 28 = $3,780/mo, or $45,360/yr. Even before we count the HR team, the handbook, the 401(k) plan, and the IRS compliance — you net $66K in savings in year one. And per NAPEO, you'll grow 7-9% faster and your turnover drops 10-14%."
Rep: "Timeline: 90 days to full implementation. The biggest gate is open enrollment — we want to move you either at your renewal date or at January 1. Today is [date]. To hit Jan 1, we need a signed agreement by [Oct 15]. Want to lock the calendar?"
Do NOT:
- Quote per-employee fees without quoting the delta vs current state. The fee in isolation is always too high; the delta is always compelling.
- Promise specific premium reductions without underwriting confirmation. Use ranges ("typically 15-30% on family-tier") and confirm post-underwriting.
- Skip the workers-comp line. It's a $10K-$50K/yr saving on most SMB engagements and the easiest hard-dollar proof.
- Forget to name NAPEO, SHRM, and ADP Research Institute in the proposal. The third-party validation closes the deal.
Section 5 — The Implementation Timeline and Math (15 min)
PEO implementation is 90 days, period. Drill the timing on the whiteboard so no rep over-promises.
The math for a 28-employee SMB:
- Healthcare premium savings: $290/EE/mo × 28 × 12 = $97,440/yr
- Workers comp savings: ~$14,000/yr (pay-as-you-go vs standalone audit)
- HR services that owner no longer buys ad-hoc: $400/mo retainer + $250/hr employment lawyer × 6 hrs = $6,300/yr
- PEO fee: $135 PEPM × 28 × 12 = $45,360/yr
- Net year-one savings: ~$72,000 *and* you offer Fortune-500 benefits that recruit better talent and reduce turnover 10-14% per NAPEO.
Common SMB objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"It's too expensive."* — "$135 per-employee-per-month sounds high until you net it against the healthcare and workers-comp savings. Net it for me on this whiteboard — you save $72K in year one."
- *"I don't want to lose control."* — "Co-employment is an IRS/benefits construct. You still hire, fire, schedule, promote, raise. You don't lose a single management decision."
- *"What if I want to leave?"* — "Standard off-boarding is 30-90 days. We give you your tax history, your W-2s, your employee data. No claw-back, no lock-in."
- *"My broker says I don't need this."* — "Your broker earns commission on your current plan. Ask them what your renewal looks like in 3 years if you stay standalone."
- *"Why not just use Gusto or Rippling instead?"* — "Gusto and Rippling are payroll-and-HRIS — fantastic platforms. They are not co-employers. You still buy your own benefits, your own workers comp, your own HR team. That's a different model."
- *"We're too small."* — "Paychex Small Business Snapshot shows the sweet spot is 5-50 employees. Below 5, payroll-only makes sense. You're squarely in the PEO zone."
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each rep leaves with three written commitments, taped to their monitor:
- Every discovery call surfaces all 3 pains — payroll, benefits, HR — and produces a documented summary in the CRM within 24 hours.
- Every quote is built on real numbers — payroll register, benefits renewal, headcount roster. No quote ships without all three.
- Every proposal names the IRS Section 105/125 framework, NAPEO ROI stats, and a 90-day timeline aligned to Jan 1 or the prospect's benefits renewal.
Close by reading the NAPEO finding aloud: *"Small businesses that use a PEO grow 7-9% faster, have 10-14% lower turnover, and are 50% less likely to go out of business than comparable non-PEO businesses."*
Then send the room out with the 3-pain template, the ROI worksheet, the IRS Section 105/125 cheat sheet, and the 90-day implementation calendar pinned in the team Slack.
FAQ
Q1: What's the difference between PEO and ASO? A: PEO is co-employment — your team is reported under the PEO's FEIN, you inherit the master health plan and workers-comp pool. ASO (administrative services only) is outsourced HR/payroll administration without co-employment — you keep your own FEIN and buy your own benefits.
PEO produces 80% of the savings; ASO is a step down.
Q2: When is the best month to go live on a PEO? A: January 1 is the cleanest — calendar-year benefits and W-2s reset together. Your benefits renewal date is the second-best. Avoid mid-Q4 unless renewal forces it; year-end payroll cut-overs create W-2 reconciliation headaches.
Q3: What if my prospect already has a 401(k)? A: Most PEOs offer a multiple-employer 401(k) plan (MEP) with lower fund fees and zero administrative load on the owner. Per NAPEO, 52% of PEO users at 10-49 employees offer a retirement plan vs 23% of non-PEO. The MEP is often a tie-breaker.
Q4: How do I handle a prospect using ADP or Paychex payroll-only today? A: Discovery question: *"Do you want your benefits, workers comp, and HR consolidated under one EIN, with a credentialed HR team?"* If yes, move them to the PEO module (ADP TotalSource, Paychex PEO, or competitor). If no, leave them on payroll-only.
Q5: What size company is too big for a PEO? A: Most PEOs sweet-spot at 5-200 worksite employees. Above 250, an in-house HR team + standalone large-group plan usually beats PEO economics. Insperity and TriNet push higher; Justworks and Gusto cap at smaller bands.
Q6: How do PEOs handle multi-state employment? A: This is where PEOs dominate the standalone alternative. They hold registrations and state-tax IDs in all 50 states; you don't have to register your EIN in a new state every time you hire remotely. NAPEO lists multi-state compliance as the #2 driver of PEO adoption.
Sources
- NAPEO (National Association of Professional Employer Organizations), *Industry Research and Data*, napeo.org/intro-to-peos/industry-research-data, 2024-2025.
- NAPEO / McBassi & Co., *PEO ROI Study: 27.2% Annual ROI and 7-9% Faster Growth*, napeo.org research library.
- SHRM (Society for Human Resource Management), *HR Risk and Compliance Cost Benchmarks for SMBs*, shrm.org research, 2024-2025.
- ADP Research Institute, *Small Business Workforce Report*, adpri.org, 2024-2025.
- Paychex, *Small Business Snapshot*, paychex.com/small-business-snapshot, 2025.
- IRS, *Section 105 Health Reimbursement Arrangements and Section 125 Cafeteria Plan rules*, irs.gov.
- CPA Practice Advisor / SelectSoftware Reviews, *Best PEO Companies 2026 buyer guides*, 2025-2026 editions.
- Rippling, Justworks, Gusto, Insperity, TriNet — *2025-2026 published pricing pages and PEO product disclosures*.