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Wood Products Technical Salesperson

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Math

Technical salespeople in the wood products industry use math regularly. Like any salesperson, they use math for costing, pricing and writing up invoices. But there are some additional math skills required in this industry that other salespeople might never use.

"Solid trigonometry is used all the time," says Russ Radcliffe, a technical salesman in Oregon. "You're doing roof areas, slopes. We do a lot of work with curved glulams, so you're dealing with the geometry of curves."

Here's a sample of the typical math a salesperson in this industry uses daily:

You need to determine how much of your product is needed by a contractor to complete his project. Then you'll have to make up a quote for the customer.

The house is 96 feet long by 27 feet wide. The joists (2 x 10s) to support the second floor of the house are installed 16 inches apart width-wise for the full length of the house. When you calculate the number of joists you need, make sure that you add one extra for the last joist at the end of the house. The 2 x 10s are priced at $1.25 per linear foot.

The engineered trusses (the roof triangle) are spaced 24 inches apart width-wise for the full length of the house. The trusses must overhang the outside walls by one foot all the way around the house. They cost $1.50 per linear foot.

Two laminated beams are needed, one 13 feet long and the other 20 feet long. The laminated beams cost $3.40 per linear foot.

Now calculate the cost of each material and the total cost of all the materials.

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