Amy picks up your missed calls 24/7, sounds like a real receptionist, books the job, and texts you the details before the caller hangs up. If it's an emergency, she rings your cell directly.
This is a real line. Ask Amy anything a customer would — a clogged drain, a flooded basement, a price.
One code on your phone sends unanswered calls to Amy. Your number stays your number. You can still pick up like always.
She asks what's wrong, gets the name, number, and address, and books a time window — the same intake a good dispatcher runs.
Seconds after the call ends, the whole job is in your pocket. Call back when you're off the ladder — the lead is already yours.
Flooding, sewage backup, no water — Amy recognizes it, talks the caller through shutting off the main valve, and rings your cell live. Gas smell? She sends them to 911 first.
She quotes only your starting rate and promises the exact price before work begins. No surprises you have to walk back on site.
Morning, afternoon, or first available — captured with the address so you can route your day.
Robocalls and "Google listing" pitches get a polite goodbye. They never reach your pocket.
The math is simple: one saved job pays for months of Amy. A water heater call runs $800–$2,400. Amy costs $99.
And if anything ever goes wrong on our end, your calls simply ring to your phone like they do today. You can never end up worse off than voicemail.
Then imagine it's your shop's name she's answering with.