By Randy Chaffee, Source One Marketing.
Let’s clear something up. You don’t need to carry a briefcase to be in sales. You don’t need a quota, a CRM or never an ending “sales strategy meetings” to be a salesperson. If you’re a roofer, you’re in sales — whether you admit it or not.
That might ruffle a few shingles, but it’s true.
Every time you show up to a jobsite, how you carry yourself sells something. Your truck, your gear, your crew, your attitude, your work — they all tell a story. And if you think you’re just there to hammer nails and not build trust, you’re missing the point.
The sale doesn’t start when someone writes a check. It starts the first time they lay eyes on you. Maybe it’s a yard sign. Maybe it’s your social media post. Maybe it’s how you explained the job to a homeowner who doesn’t know ridge cap from drip edge. That’s the sales moment. And most of the time, it doesn’t feel like a pitch — it feels like clarity, confidence and character.
Here’s the twist: most folks don’t realize some of today’s best salespeople still swing hammers. They just know that good work and good communication are both part of the gig. Swinging a hammer doesn’t keep you from being a salesman — it augments it. You don’t need to be slick. You don’t want to be. Just be someone people trust.
I’ve been in this industry long enough to know the guys who stay busy year-round aren’t just great installers. They’re pros who get it. They show up on time, do what they say and explain things in plain language. That’s selling.
You don’t need to “be in sales.” You just need to own the role you already play.
And if that still makes you uncomfortable, think of it this way: when a neighbor sees that finished roof and asks who did the job, you want the homeowner to say YOUR name without hesitation. That’s the win. That’s the referral. That’s sales.
Learn more about Source One Marketing in their Coffee Shop Directory or visit sourceonemarketingllc.com.
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