In big-ticket home improvement sales, the gap between contractors who close bigger projects and the ones discounting to compete rarely comes down to pricing or product quality. More often, it comes down to one decision: when and how financing is introduced into the sales conversation.
In a recent appearance on the ProLine CRM podcast, Skeps SVP of Home Improvement Enterprise Platform Sales Mike Fredricks shared what he’s learned across 30+ years in home improvement sales, most recently leading enterprise financing strategy for some of the largest contractor brands in the country. His core message for sales teams was simple:
“You’re not there to sell them a product; you’re there to solve a problem and make a friend. Anything along the way that throws a wrench into the engine, you need to see what’s out there to avoid that wrench throw.”
In home improvement, the most common wrench thrown into a high-ticket sales conversation is friction at the financing step, multiple applications, hard credit pulls, uncomfortable money talk, and avoidable denials. That friction shows up in lost deals, smaller projects, and reps trained to discount their way to a close.
To unpack how contractors can avoid those wrench throws, we’re going to cover:
Why financing should be treated as a conversion tool, not a payment optionFive things the top-performing contractors are doing differently
The numbers Skeps merchants are seeing in the field
How to build a financing stack that closes more projects, with Skeps
Financing Is a Conversion Tool, Not a Payment Option
Most contractors still treat consumer financing the way an e-commerce site treats a credit card: a checkbox at the end of the process. The homeowner agrees to the project, the rep walks them to the kitchen table, and then the application comes out. By that point, the deal is already either won or quietly lost.
High-performing teams flip that order. They introduce monthly payment options early, before the close, before pricing pushback, before objections harden, because monthly payments reframe how a homeowner perceives the cost of the project. A $22,000 roof feels different at the kitchen table than $295 per month with approved financing. Same project, same margin, different conversation.
Used this way, financing isn’t a payment mechanism. It’s a conversion tool, and like any conversion tool, it only works if you deploy it early.
What Separates the Contractors Closing Bigger Projects
Across thousands of in-home consultations, the same patterns show up again and again. The contractors closing bigger projects (and the ones not leaning on discounts to compete) consistently do five things:
- They pre-qualify homeowners before the full application. A soft pull surfaces real options without a hard credit hit and without the awkward “can you afford this” conversation.
- They present monthly payment options in the home, not at checkout. Payment framing happens during the sales conversation — not bolted on after the homeowner has already pushed back on price.
- They run financing across every channel. Web, in-home sales, and field reps all have access to the same financing experience, so the homeowner has a consistent path regardless of how the conversation started.
- They use a multi-lender setup with seamless credit orchestration. A single denial doesn’t kill the deal. The homeowner is routed to the next-best option without having to fill out another application.
- They treat financing as a metric worth optimizing. Approval rate, application-to-funded conversion, and average financed ticket size all sit on the same dashboard as close rate. If it’s measured, it improves.
None of these are theoretical. They’re field-tested patterns Mike has watched play out in living rooms and at kitchen tables across the country.
The Numbers Behind a Better Financing Stack
When contractors stop treating financing as an afterthought and start running it as core sales infrastructure, the results show up on the scoreboard. Skeps merchants are seeing:
- Up to 86% approval rates through lender-agnostic credit orchestration that routes each homeowner to the lender best suited to approve them.
- A 30% lift in sales conversions by reducing friction and removing the “awkward money talk” that stalls deals in-home.
- A 25% increase in average order value as homeowners trade up to the project they actually want, not the one they think they can afford on a credit card.
The infrastructure to deliver these outcomes already exists. The gap, in most home improvement organizations, is in how and when financing is used in the sales process.
Build a Financing Stack That Closes More Projects With Skeps
Skeps’ technology platform offers lender-agnostic credit orchestration designed for exactly this kind of high-ticket, consultative sale. Instead of locking a contractor into a single lender (and a single set of approval criteria), Skeps connects the buyer to the payment solution that best fits their profile, without forcing them through multiple applications or putting them through uncomfortable denials.
Whether the homeowner is sitting on a couch with a field rep, talking to a call center agent, or filling out a web form at 11pm, the financing experience is the same: pre-qualification up front, the right offers in front of them, and a clean path to funded.
Built specifically for the way home improvement actually sells, Skeps supports:
- Soft-pull pre-qualification before a full application
- Monthly payment presentation tools for in-home and digital channels
- Multi-lender credit orchestration with intelligent waterfall logic
- Installment loans, co-branded credit cards, and promotional financing offers
- Reporting that treats financing as a measurable sales metric, not a back-office function
If you’re a roofing contractor, home improvement brand, or enterprise sales leader trying to figure out why your close rate isn’t where it should be, the full conversation with Mike on the ProLine CRM podcast is worth your time. Watch the full interview on YouTube.
Want to see what a Skeps-empowered financing stack would look like for your business? Request a demo or contact us at support@skeps.com.



