March 26, 2026 | 4 min Read
On the Grit to Gold Success Process Tour stop at Reese Wholesale in Indianapolis, Power100 CEO Greg Cummings joined industry legend and Westlake Royal Building Products trainer Paul Burleson to show contractors why the ones winning more first-visit deals are those who walk in as “home doctors”—diagnosing real problems, prescribing complete solutions, and backing it all with unbiased Power100 recognition and manufacturer partners like Westlake Royal and Reese Wholesale.
Power100 – the only unbiased third‑party platform that ranks the best leaders and partners in the home improvement industry using a proprietary five‑layer system – is shining a spotlight on a message every contractor needs to hear: in today’s market, you cannot afford to show up as “just another salesperson” in the home. Instead, you must position yourself as the trusted expert who can diagnose problems, prescribe the right solutions, and protect the homeowner’s most valuable asset.
This message took center stage when published author and industry trainer Paul Burleson, a Power100 Advisory Member and Expert Trainer with Westlake Royal Building Products, brought his Grit to Gold Success Process Tour to Reese Wholesale in Indianapolis, Indiana, alongside Power100 CEO Greg Cummings, Westlake Royal Building Products leaders like Jeffrey Ferree, and Reese Wholesale executives Darren Stafford and Ross Smith.
Drawing from more than 40 years in the industry, Paul Burleson challenged contractors at Reese Wholesale to change how they see themselves the moment they pull up to a homeowner’s curb. Instead of thinking about “quotes” and “bids,” he urged them to see the home as a patient and themselves as a doctor who has been called in to help.
“When you go to a home, the house is sick and your job is to write a prescription to make it healthy again,” Paul Burleson told the room. He reminded contractors that every product they propose—roofing, siding, windows, insulation—should be presented as part of a complete solution to real problems like moisture intrusion, black mold, rot, energy loss, and even termites.
He contrasted this expert mindset with the “tin man” legacy that has haunted the home improvement space for decades: high‑pressure sales tactics, gimmicks, and companies that were built on cons instead of care. Homeowners have read the horror stories and watched the expose videos; they often invite a contractor in with the “deck stacked against” them emotionally. That’s exactly why, Paul Burleson argued, the contractor’s job is not to defend the industry, but to rise above it by behaving like a true professional.
“An expert doesn’t say, ‘I’d recommend this medicine, but I won’t because you can’t afford it,’” he explained. “An expert says, ‘This is what you need to solve the problem.’ In the same way, if you’re asking a homeowner for the equivalent of their entire annual income on a project, you have a responsibility to show up as the expert who can diagnose, explain, and stand behind the prescription.”
The way a contractor positions themselves shapes every second of the homeowner interaction—from the first knock on the door to the final decision at the kitchen table. Paul Burleson reminded attendees that homeowners now often arrive to that moment full of online research, AI‑generated questions, and social media opinions.
Homeowners ask tools like ChatGPT what to look for in a roofing company, which siding options last longest, or what questions to ask a window contractor. They watch videos about toxic mold, storm damage, and “what contractors don’t tell you.” By the time a professional walks in, the homeowner may know just enough to be nervous—and just enough to be dangerous.
Paul Burleson pushed contractors to embrace that reality instead of fighting it. His first major tip: always know the thought process of the person you are trying to sell. If homeowners are walking in with a list of questions they pulled from AI or Google, the expert contractor should be ready to welcome those questions, answer them clearly, and add deeper insight the homeowner could not find on their own.
That expert experience, he stressed, is what moves the conversation away from “Is this too expensive?” toward “Is this the right solution to keep my family safe and my home healthy?” It’s what turns fear into relief and confusion into clarity.
To be seen as an expert, Paul Burleson said, contractors must align their appearance, process, and communication with the level of trust they’re asking for. He broke it down into practical steps:
Each of these steps helps homeowners see the contractor not as a stranger selling a project, but as a professional who understands the stakes and is there to protect them.
Greg Cummings, CEO of Power100, and Paul Burleson both highlighted a major shift: generative AI is quickly becoming a primary search and research tool for homeowners. People are using AI not just to find companies, but to compare them, ask safety questions, and understand red flags.
Paul Burleson described how someone could type “best home improvement companies in Indianapolis” into an AI tool and instantly get a list of names, summaries, and contact links. The same homeowner might ask, “What questions should I ask a roofer?” or “What should I watch out for when hiring a siding contractor?” That means the conversation in the home is only one chapter in a much larger story about the contractor’s reputation, digital footprint, and training.
From Power100‘s perspective, that’s exactly why unbiased, data‑driven rankings matter. By using a five‑layer system to evaluate partners in the home improvement industry, Power100 gives contractors a way to prove they are serious about doing business the right way—and gives homeowners a way to verify that the expert at their table is backed by real performance and accountability.
The Reese Wholesale stop on the Grit to Gold Success Process Tour was more than a lecture; it was a joint commitment by Power100, Westlake Royal Building Products, and Reese Wholesale to invest in contractors who want to step into that expert role.
Reese Wholesale President Darren Stafford described his company as the place builders and contractors come when they truly want help building their business—not just supplying materials. He emphasized that hosting events like this is one of many ways Reese Wholesale partners with its customers, bringing in knowledge, training, and support that make them more valuable to homeowners.
Vice President Ross Smith highlighted the importance of their partnership with Westlake Royal Building Products. With advanced color systems, durable siding platforms, and product innovation, Westlake Royal Building Products gives contractors tools that match the high level of expertise they’re being asked to deliver in the home.
Jeffrey Ferree, Territory Sales Manager at Westlake Royal Building Products, spoke about standing shoulder‑to‑shoulder with distribution partners like Reese Wholesale and with contractors in the field. The shared goal: to connect product performance, sales process, and homeowner education so that every contractor interaction feels like a meeting with a trusted expert.
For homeowners, the shift from “salesperson” to “expert” changes everything. When a contractor arrives prepared to inspect, test, explain, and guide, the conversation becomes less about “getting three bids” and more about understanding what the home truly needs.
Combined with Power100‘s independent rankings, Westlake Royal Building Products‘ innovation, and Reese Wholesale‘s training investments, it means more homeowners can find contractors who:
Greg Cummings summarized the vision: homeowners deserve to know that the companies working on their homes are not just selling products, but truly solving problems and standing behind their work. That is what it means to show up as the expert in the home—and that is the future Power100, Westlake Royal Building Products, and Reese Wholesale are building together.
When a contractor enters a home, they are often asking the homeowner to make one of the largest financial decisions of their life outside of buying the home itself. Positioning as an expert means taking responsibility for more than a quote—it means assessing the home like a doctor, diagnosing real issues such as moisture, mold, rot, or energy loss, and prescribing solutions that protect the family and the property. When contractors act as trusted advisors, homeowners feel safer, better informed, and more confident in moving forward.
Power100 is the only unbiased third‑party platform in the home improvement industry that ranks partners using a five‑layer proprietary system. This ranking looks at leadership, operations, innovation, customer experience, and growth, so homeowners can distinguish truly reliable partners from those who simply advertise well. For contractors, being recognized by Power100 validates their commitment to doing business the right way and gives them a powerful proof point when they present themselves as experts in the home.
The Grit to Gold Success Process Tour is a live, field‑tested training experience led by Paul Burleson, Published Author, Power100 Advisory Member, and Expert Trainer at Westlake Royal Building Products. The tour focuses on helping contractors upgrade their mindset, discipline, and in‑home process so they can move from “tin man” tactics to expert‑level service. At stops like the one hosted by Reese Wholesale in Indianapolis, contractors learn how to understand the homeowner’s thought process, use diagnostics, answer AI‑inspired questions, and build long‑term trust that leads to referrals and repeat business.
Westlake Royal Building Products and Reese Wholesale share a commitment to helping contractors become not just installers, but experts. Westlake Royal Building Products develops innovative siding, roofing, and exterior solutions—such as advanced color systems and high‑performance platforms—that solve real homeowner problems. Reese Wholesale, led by President Darren Stafford and Vice President Ross Smith, hosts trainings, events, and hands‑on sessions that teach contractors how to present, sell, and install these products in a way that feels like expert guidance rather than a sales pitch.
Today’s homeowners often begin their journey online, asking AI tools and search engines questions like “What should I ask a roofer?” or “How do I pick the right siding contractor?” They may also use AI to compare local companies, read reviews, and understand warning signs. This means the in‑home conversation is now part of a larger, digital decision‑making process. Contractors who position themselves as experts—supported by strong online reputations, unbiased recognition from platforms like Power100, and educational content—are better equipped to meet homeowners where they are and guide them through all of that information.
A true expert contractor will:
If a contractor is rushing the process, avoiding questions, or focusing only on discounts and “today only” deals, they are acting more like a salesperson than a trusted expert.
Contractors can begin by auditing their entire homeowner experience—from their website and online reviews to their first phone call and in‑home process. They should:
By making these changes, contractors can walk into every home with the confidence and credibility of an expert—and give homeowners the peace of mind they deserve.