You spent money to generate that lead. Google Ads, Facebook campaigns, Angi, Thumbtack, a direct mail drop, a referral program, whatever the source, you paid for it in time, money, or both. The prospect raised their hand. They said, “Yes, I’m interested.” They gave you their name, their number, and their problem.
And then… nothing.
No callback. No text. No email. Maybe a voicemail they didn’t respond to. And a few days later, they’ve signed a contract with your competitor, and you don’t even know it yet.
This is the silent revenue killer that plagues home service businesses of every size, from solo operators to multi-location franchise networks. It’s not that the leads are bad; it’s that the follow-up is broken. Or worse, nonexistent.
The good news? This is completely fixable. There is a proven, specific structure for following up with home service leads that dramatically increases contact and appointment rates, and ultimately revenue. It’s what separates contractors who consistently fill their calendars from those who wonder why their marketing “isn’t working.”
Here’s exactly how to build it.
Why Most Lead Follow-Up Fails Before It Starts
Before we get to the cadence itself, let’s be honest about why most home service businesses struggle with lead follow-up.
The average home service company takes 30 to 45 minutes to respond to an inbound lead. Studies consistently show that a lead’s likelihood of converting drops by more than 80% if you don’t respond within five minutes. That’s not a typo. Five minutes. After that, you’re fighting an uphill battle that gets steeper with every passing hour.
Why are contractors so slow? Because they’re running a business. Your office manager is scheduling crews. Your estimator is on a job site. Your phone is ringing from an existing customer with a question. The new web form submission that came in at 2:17 PM on a Tuesday? It sits in an inbox until somebody has a free moment, which, during peak season, might be never.
The problem compounds specifically with digital leads. When someone submits a form on your website or comes through HomeAdvisor, Thumbtack, or Porch, they’ve often submitted to multiple contractors simultaneously. It’s a race. The first professional, human response wins, not the best price or the best reviews. Speed wins.
This is why a home services call center with a structured follow-up cadence isn’t just a nice-to-have. It’s the difference between a full calendar and a mediocre one.
The Anatomy of a High-Converting Follow-Up Cadence
A great lead follow-up cadence has three channels working in concert: phone calls, SMS texts, and emails. Each channel has a different psychology, purpose, and audience. Together, they create a multi-touch outreach system that maximizes your chances of reaching every single lead you generate.
The Pronexis standard cadence, refined over years of working with 100+ home service brands across roofing, windows, painting, bath remodeling, HVAC, plumbing, pest control, and more, is built on 5 calls, 3 SMS messages, and 4 emails per lead. That’s 12 total contact attempts, spread across a strategic timeline, each with a specific purpose.
Let’s walk through it.
Phase 1: The First Five Minutes (This Is Everything)
Speed-to-lead is not a nice-to-have. It is the single most important variable in whether a home service lead converts.
When a new lead comes in, whether from your website, a lead marketplace, a Google Ad, or a social campaign, the clock starts immediately. Your goal is to make live contact within five minutes. Not 30. Not 45. Five.
Contact Attempt #1 — Call (Immediate)
The moment a lead hits your system, a call should go out. This is your highest-percentage shot. A live, professional voice reaching a prospect while they’re still in “inquiry mode,” still holding their phone, still thinking about the project, is worth more than every other follow-up attempt combined.
If they answer: great. Qualify them, show enthusiasm, and book the appointment right there. With a trained agent asking the right questions, your qualified conversion rate can reach 69% to 70% or higher.
If they don’t answer, leave a brief, professional voicemail. Introduce yourself, reference what they inquired about, clearly state your callback number, and let them know you’ll follow up by text. Then do exactly that.
Contact Attempt #2 — SMS (Within 2 Minutes of Voicemail)
Text messages have a 98% open rate. Email sits around 20–25%. Phone calls go unanswered. SMS is your most reliable channel for getting eyes on your message, and homeowners who missed your call will often respond to a text within minutes.
Your first text should be short, professional, and personalized. Something like: “Hi [Name], this is [Company], following up on your roofing inquiry. We’d love to schedule a free inspection. What time works best for you this week?”
Keep it conversational, not spammy. Include a clear next step. And make sure it’s coming from a real number that can receive replies, not a no-reply shortcode.
Contact Attempt #3 — Email (Within 5 Minutes)
Email is the channel that builds credibility. Your first email shouldn’t just say “we got your inquiry.” It should do some selling. Include a brief intro of your company, what sets you apart (US-based professionals, fast response, industry expertise), and a clear CTA to book a time.
If you can personalize based on their inquiry, “We saw you’re interested in a free roof inspection,” do it. Personalization alone can lift open rates by 25–30%.
At this point, you’ve made three contact attempts in under five minutes. You’re already ahead of 95% of your competition.
Phase 2: The Next 24 Hours (Persistence Without Annoyance)
Not every lead responds immediately. Life happens. They were driving. They were in a meeting. They got distracted and forgot. Day one follow-up is about staying top of mind without becoming a nuisance.
Contact Attempt #4 — Call (2–4 Hours After Initial Attempt)
If you haven’t reached them yet, a second call a few hours later catches a different part of the day. If they work 9–5, a call at 5:30 PM catches them after work. If your first call was in the afternoon, a morning follow-up call changes the timing.
If you reach voicemail again, leave a slightly different message. Reference that you tried earlier. Reiterate the value you offer. Give them an easy out to schedule: “Feel free to reply to our text or email, and we can work around your schedule.”
Contact Attempt #5 — Email (Same Day, Evening)
Your second email should come across as a helpful check-in, not desperation. Consider adding a value-add, a quick tip about the service they inquired about, a link to a recent project photo, or a brief customer testimonial. This reinforces credibility and gives them a reason to engage beyond just booking.
Subject lines that work: “Quick question about your [service] project” or “Still interested? Here’s what to expect from your free inspection.”
Phase 3: Days 2–4 (The Window Where Most Leads Are Won or Lost)
This is the phase that separates the professionals from the pack. Most contractors give up after one or two attempts. The data show that the majority of conversions occur between the third and eighth contact attempts. If you’re stopping at two, you’re leaving money, a lot of money, on the table.
Contact Attempt #6 — Call (Day 2, Morning)
Try again. Different time of day. If you haven’t reached them, vary your approach. If it’s a roofing lead after a storm, add urgency: “We’re booking inspections quickly this week. I want to make sure we can get you on the schedule.” Urgency is authentic and appropriate when the context supports it.
Contact Attempt #7 — SMS (Day 2, Afternoon)
Your second text is your second-best shot after that first immediate SMS. Keep it brief, warm, and personal. Ask a direct yes/no question: “Are you still looking for a roofing estimate? Happy to make it easy, just let me know.” A low-friction ask is more likely to get a response than a complex one.
Contact Attempt #8 — Email (Day 3)
Your third email can introduce a little more personality and brand story. Who are you? Why do homeowners in their area trust you? What does your process look like? This email is for the prospect who’s comparing you with competitors and needs a clearer understanding of your value proposition before committing to an appointment.
This is also a great place to include social proof, a Google review quote, a before/after photo, and a short testimonial. One piece of evidence can do more than ten paragraphs of copy.
Contact Attempt #9 — Call (Day 3, Late Afternoon)
Still haven’t connected? Keep going. The third call attempt at yet another time slot covers your bases across morning, midday, and late afternoon. Some people are genuinely just hard to reach; they’re not ignoring you, they’re busy. Your persistence is working in your favor.
Phase 4: The Long Tail (Days 5–14)
Contact Attempt #10 — Email (Day 5)
Your final standard email is your “last chance” message, positioned not as a plea of desperation but as a way to close the loop professionally. Something like: “We’ve tried to reach you a few times about your [service] inquiry. We don’t want to keep bothering you, but we also don’t want you to miss out on [seasonal promotion / fast scheduling / limited availability]. If now isn’t the right time, no worries, we’ll be here when you’re ready.”
This email performs surprisingly well. The “closing the loop” psychology triggers a response from people who genuinely meant to get back to you but kept forgetting.
Contact Attempts #11 and #12 — Call and SMS (Day 7 and Day 14)
Your final two contact attempts are spaced out: one at the one-week mark and one at two weeks. By now, you’ve exhausted the hot window. But leads don’t always expire on your timeline. A homeowner who wasn’t ready last week might be ready today because the leak worsened, the estimate from someone else was too high, or they finally cleared their schedule.
Day 14 is your bookend. A final call and a final text. Professional, warm, brief. No pressure. And then you either let the lead rest or move it to a lead reactivation campaign for future follow-up.
Disposition Tracking: The Secret Ingredient Most Businesses Skip
Here’s what makes a follow-up cadence go from decent to exceptional: tracking the outcome of every single contact attempt.
Every call, text, and email needs a recorded disposition of what happened. Did they answer and book? Did they answer and say call back later? Did they say they went with someone else? Did they say now isn’t a good time? Was it a wrong number? A duplicate lead?
This data does two things. First, it tells you exactly where in the cadence your leads are converting, allowing you to optimize your timing and messaging. Second, it prevents your team from repeatedly contacting people who have explicitly said they’re not interested, which protects your brand and your team’s time.
Without disposition tracking, your lead management is flying blind. With it, you have a feedback loop that continuously improves your results.
A CRM-integrated follow-up system that logs every attempt, tracks every response, and surfaces the right leads at the right time is the operational infrastructure every serious home service contractor needs.
The Calls-Only Trap (And Why SMS + Email Matter)
Some contractors try to run a follow-up process that’s calls only. The logic makes sense. You want to talk to people, right? Calls are where the conversations happen.
Here’s the problem: not everyone answers their phone from unknown numbers anymore. Especially younger homeowners. If your entire follow-up strategy is call-only, you’re invisible to a growing segment of your market.
SMS is where you catch the people who screen calls. Email is where you reach the people who need time to think before committing to a conversation. Together, the three channels cover dramatically more ground than any single channel alone.
When Pronexis runs omnichannel follow-up sequences for home service clients, contact rates are measurably higher than single-channel approaches. The data is clear: multi-channel outreach is not optional if you want to maximize lead conversion.
What Happens When You Actually Execute This Cadence
Let’s put some numbers behind this.
If your current follow-up process is one or two calls and a voicemail, which describes the majority of home service businesses, your contact rate on digital leads might be around 30–40%.
With a structured 5-3-4 cadence executed at the right intervals, contact rates routinely climb to 60–70% of all leads. And when you make contact with a qualified lead using a trained, professional agent, conversion rates reach 69% to 70% or higher.
That improvement from 35% contact rate to 65% contact rate on the same lead volume you’re already paying for represents a massive increase in appointments booked with zero additional marketing spend. It’s not that you need more leads. It’s better to follow up on the leads you already have.
This is why lead follow-up is one of the highest-ROI investments a home service contractor can make. You’ve already done the hard work of generating the lead. The cadence is what captures the return on that investment.
Can You Run This In-House?
Technically, yes. In practice, it’s extremely difficult, and most businesses that try eventually realize the resource cost is higher than expected.
Running a proper 12-touch cadence across every lead at the right intervals, with quality scripting, disposition tracking, and CRM integration, requires either dedicated staff or purpose-built automation. It’s not a task you can add to an already-busy office manager’s plate and expect to execute consistently at volume.
During peak season, when lead volume spikes exactly when your team is most stretched, the cadence is the first thing that breaks down. And that’s precisely when proper appointment setting matters most.
That’s the case for a home services call center that runs this system professionally and at scale for hundreds of clients across every major home service vertical. The economies of scale make it possible to execute this cadence on every lead, every time, without the overhead of building and managing it yourself.
Start by Auditing What You’ve Got
Before you overhaul your entire follow-up process, it’s worth understanding what your current system is actually producing. What’s your contact rate? What’s your average response time? How many leads are falling out of your funnel before someone even talks to them?
That’s exactly what a Free Lead Response Audit with Pronexis will show you: a complete picture of where your leads are going, how fast you’re responding, and how much revenue is realistically being left on the table by your current process. No obligation, no sales pitch, just data.
Your leads are already working hard to find you. Make sure you’re working just as hard to keep them.
Pronexis is a full-spectrum lead management and appointment-setting platform built exclusively for home service businesses. From roofing to windows, painting to HVAC, we execute proven follow-up cadences that convert more leads into booked appointments — consistently, professionally, and at scale. Learn more at pronexis.com.
