Turn pest calls into recurring customers.
Pest callers are often emotional: rodents, bed bugs, termites, ants, wasps, and something moving in the walls. They want a fast inspection and a clear next step.
Most losses never show up as losses.
The money is not only the first visit. The leak is losing the first inspection that could have become a recurring plan.
The goal is booked revenue, not another inbox.
Start by measuring the hidden leak.
No guesswork. Find the leak in the numbers.
The audit is built to connect invisible follow-up gaps to real operating evidence: when calls were missed, what the job may have been worth, and what happened next.
Start with the highest-confidence recovery path.
We do not need to rebuild the whole business to prove value. The first rollout should close one measurable leak, then expand once the numbers justify it.
Audit
Measure missed calls, slow response, old opportunities, and review follow-up.
Install
Launch the first pest control recovery workflow around the biggest leak.
Report
Show calls caught, jobs routed, old leads revived, reviews requested, and next fixes.
Common questions from pest control owners.
What does call recovery do for pest control businesses?
It helps pest control teams catch missed calls, qualify the request, route the next step, follow up on old opportunities, and track what came back instead of letting the lead disappear.
Is this only for after-hours calls?
No. After-hours coverage is one leak, but busy hours often leak too. Calls get missed while the team is on another call, driving, in the field, in a treatment room, handling dispatch, or following up with an existing customer.
Can this help with old pest control leads or estimates?
Yes, when the list can be used responsibly. The audit checks old estimates, inquiries, no-shows, lapsed customers, or unfinished intake and maps a consent-aware follow-up path.
What do you need to run the Revenue Leak Audit?
Start with rough call volume, missed-call patterns, average job or consult value, old lead count, current response speed, and review follow-up process. Exact numbers help, but the audit is designed to expose what is currently invisible.
Find the first leak worth fixing.
The audit looks at missed calls, response speed, old opportunities, review follow-up, and whether a recovery system can pay for itself in this market.