How we pre-qualify siding inquiries and talk about pricing, so estimate hours go to jobs that can actually close.
A full siding estimate takes 2 to 3 hours of Nate's time. Most of those hours are currently spent on jobs that were never going to close.
The gap between what callers expect and what the job costs is often 2 to 3 times. When that gap surfaces at the quote reveal, after a site visit and hours of estimating, the deal dies and the time is gone. The fix is simple: surface the gap on the first phone call, before anyone drives anywhere.
This is not theory. It is the consensus approach among experienced remodelers, general contractors, and roofers in contractor communities we researched in June 2026. The operators who solved this problem all landed on the same core move.
A 5-minute conversation that decides whether the lead earns a site visit. Friendly, natural, no interrogation. Work the questions into the flow of the call.
Sticker shock itself is normal. What matters is the kind of shock. Listen for the difference between "that is more than I hoped" and "that is outrageous."
They accepted the range and are still moving forward. This is a real lead. Book Nate's site visit while you have them on the phone. Propose specific times.
Genuine surprise is normal. Most homeowners have never priced siding and anchored on a number from a neighbour or a quick search. Acknowledge it and explore scope before committing a site visit:
Sometimes the answer is a smaller scope (one wall, the worst side first) that fits their number. That can still be a good job and a future full-house customer.
Not our customer, and no site visit will change that. Thank them, invite them to call back if plans change, and log the inquiry. Nate just got 2 to 3 hours of his life back. That is the playbook working, not a lost sale.
In the homeowner communities we researched, the anger is never really about price. It is about the sequence: a contractor visits, measures, disappears for a few days, then reveals a number 2 to 3 times what the homeowner imagined. From the homeowner's side, that feels like an ambush, and the contractor reads as predatory even when the price is fair.
The homeowners aren't being unreasonable. They Googled a number, or heard one from a neighbour, and it became their anchor. When the real number finally lands, the natural conclusion is "this contractor is ripping me off," not "my mental model was wrong."
The contractors who give honest ranges on the first call get more trust, not less. Stating the range early reads as straight-shooting. Hiding it until the quote reveal reads as a sales tactic, even when it isn't one.
One more reframe worth keeping: giving a range is not "tailoring the price to their budget." It is filtering for reality. The price is the price. The range conversation just decides whether it is worth both sides' time to get to the exact number.
Ideas from the same research, worth a look once the phone screen is running smoothly. None of these are needed on day one.
The whole playbook on one card. Use the print button to make a desk copy.