Calls

Stop paying for calls that end in voicemail.

When your team is busy, closed, or away from the desk, high-intent callers keep moving until someone answers.

The painful part is that the lost caller often leaves no trace. No voicemail. No booking. No clean way to know which job went to the next company.

Outcome

What changes when this leak is closed.

unanswered calls caught
job details captured
urgent calls routed
recovered opportunities reported
How it works

A recovery loop your team can actually use.

01
Detect the missed, busy, or after-hours call
02
Respond while the caller is still hot
03
Capture issue, urgency, location, and contact details
04
Route the next step and show what was recovered
Proof

What we measure before claiming victory.

This page is not promising magic. The audit creates a baseline, then the recovery workflow is judged against measurable operating data.

missed call count by day and hour
answer rate during business hours and after hours
caller intent and estimated job value
calls caught, routed, booked, or lost
Best fit

Use it where speed and follow-up decide the sale.

plumbersHVAC companiesroofersrestoration firmsgarage door companieselectricians
Questions

What buyers usually ask before starting.

Is missed-call recovery the same as voicemail?

No. Voicemail waits for the customer to leave a message. Missed-call recovery responds while the caller is still active, captures the request, and routes the next step.

Will every missed call become a booked job?

No. Some callers are vendors, spam, existing customers, or bad fits. The point is to capture the high-intent calls that would otherwise disappear and report what happened.

What calls should be escalated to a human?

Emergencies, high-value requests, safety-sensitive issues, angry customers, and anything outside the approved intake path should be routed to the right person quickly.

Next step

Start with the leak that is easiest to prove.

The audit estimates missed revenue, maps the first workflow, and gives you a practical rollout path before you commit to a larger recovery system.