Services
Process Automation
The follow-ups, reminders, and requests you already do by hand, running on their own.
If a process already works when you do it by hand, it can usually run on its own. A quote goes out, nobody replies in three days, the follow-up sends itself. A job wraps, the review request goes out that evening. Nothing speculative, nothing invented: just the work you already do, without you doing it.
The menu
Quote follow-up. You send a quote and get busy. Three days pass with no reply. A follow-up email or text goes out on its own, written the way you would have written it. Quotes stop dying in other people’s inboxes during your busy season.
Review requests. A job wraps. Two days later, the customer gets a short note with a direct link to your Google review page. Reviews come in steadily after every job, not just the ones you remember to ask about.
Scheduling reminders. A customer books. They get a confirmation right away and a reminder the day before. Fewer no-shows, and nobody spends Sunday night texting “just confirming tomorrow.”
Reorder and seasonal nudges. For retail and home services: the filters that need replacing every three months, the tune-up that comes due each fall. A timed nudge goes out when it’s due, to the customers it’s due for.
How a sprint works
One process, wired up and tested, from $600 flat. The number is agreed before we start. No hourly meter, no retainer.
- Walk the process. You show me how you do it today: where the quote lives, what the follow-up says, when you send it.
- Wire it up. I build the automated version to match, using the tools you already have wherever I can.
- Test it on real work. We run it against a real quote or a real job, and you watch it fire. It ships when it behaves exactly like you doing it, minus you.
- Hand it over. You own it, documented in plain language. And you have my number when something breaks.
Building a website too? The site plus one automation bundle starts at $3,000.
What I need from you
- A process that already works manually. This is the intake rule, and it’s firm. If the follow-up doesn’t get replies when you send it yourself, automating it just sends a bad email faster. Not sure whether yours works? That’s what the Automation Assessment is for, and its fee is credited toward the build.
- Where things live today. Your inbox, your booking tool, the spreadsheet on the truck laptop. Whatever you actually use is the starting point; I don’t make you switch systems to get started.
- One real example. A recent quote or a finished job we can test against before anything goes live.
Common questions
Is this “AI”? Mostly no, and that’s on purpose. Most of these are plain rules: when this happens, send that. Where a model genuinely helps, like drafting a reply you approve before it sends, I’ll say so. Where it doesn’t, I won’t dress a timer up as artificial intelligence.
What does it cost to run? Usually nothing, or close to it. These run on lightweight tools with free or single-digit monthly tiers, and there’s no markup: the sprint price is the price.
What happens after handover? It’s yours, one-and-done. If you want ongoing help, maintenance is $49 to $99 a month, cancel anytime. Or skip it and pay per change.
How long does it take? One process is a small, finishable piece of work. The wiring is quick; most of the time goes to testing it against your real jobs until it behaves.