Missed call text back
You're on a ladder, the phone rings out. The caller gets a text from you in seconds: sorry I missed you, what do you need? You answer when your hands are free, and the job never walks to the next name on the list.
The eight I build most often. Yours will fit your shop, your tools, and the way you already work.
You're on a ladder, the phone rings out. The caller gets a text from you in seconds: sorry I missed you, what do you need? You answer when your hands are free, and the job never walks to the next name on the list.
An invoice goes out. If it sits unpaid for a week, a polite nudge goes out with your name on it, then another one later. Nobody has an awkward conversation, and you stop being your own collections department.
The job closes and the customer gets a text asking how it went, with a review link. Happy customers actually leave the five stars they always meant to, and your profile grows while you drive to the next job.
You sent the quote and they went quiet. Three days later a friendly check-in goes out, then one more the week after. Quotes stop dying in somebody's inbox because you were too busy working to chase them.
The day before every job, the customer gets a confirmation text and can reply to reschedule. Fewer no-shows, fewer wasted drives, and nobody spends the morning calling down a list.
When you head to the job, the customer gets a heads-up with your arrival window. The where-are-you calls stop, and you show up looking like the most organized contractor they've ever hired.
Jobs, invoices, and numbers land in one spreadsheet that keeps itself current. The weekly summary is just done every Friday, same format every time, no Sunday night catch-up.
A lead fills out your form once. The sheet gets a row, the calendar gets a hold, the CRM gets the contact, and you get a text. Nothing gets re-typed and nothing gets lost.
If you do it over and over, odds are I can automate it. Tell me what's eating your time and I'll tell you straight.
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