You're on a roof. Under a sink. Elbow-deep in a engine. Essie picks up, books the appointment, texts the customer a confirmation, and sends you a summary. You look at your phone between jobs and smile.
Download the app, answer a few questions, and Essie starts handling your calls. No contracts. No complicated setup.
Your name, trade, services you offer, and phone number. Takes less than 3 minutes.
When you can't pick up, calls forward to Essie. She answers with your business name, books appointments, takes messages, and handles emergencies.
After every call, you get a text with who called, what they needed, and what Essie did. Appointments go straight to your calendar.
Essie knows your trade. She speaks your customers' language and handles the calls you can't get to.
Emergency leaks, drain clogs, water heater installs — Essie captures the job details and books it.
Learn more →Panel upgrades, outlet repairs, new construction — Essie qualifies the lead and schedules the estimate.
Learn more →AC went out in July? Essie books the emergency call and texts the homeowner a confirmation.
Learn more →Storm damage, inspections, re-roofs — Essie captures the address, photos request, and schedules the walkthrough.
Learn more →Custom builds, trim work, decks — Essie takes the project details and books the consultation.
Learn more →Storm cleanup, trimming, removals — Essie answers while you're up in the tree.
Learn more →Appointments, walk-in availability, hours — Essie handles it while you're cutting hair.
Learn more →Booking, rescheduling, service questions — Essie handles clients while your hands are busy.
Learn more →Consultations, availability, pricing questions — Essie books the appointment while you're inking.
Learn more →No tiers. No per-minute charges. No contracts.
Everything included. Cancel anytime.
No more checking voicemail. No more calling people back at 9pm. Essie handles it while you work.
Your family gets their evenings back. Essie never clocks out.
The average missed call costs a service business $200-500 in lost revenue. Essie pays for herself on day one.