Heatwaves, cold snaps, burst pipes, dead breakers — every emergency is a call your competitor is racing to answer before you. Neuzenix installs an AI employee that answers every single one, books the work into your dispatch board, and chases the follow-ups — while your techs stay on the trucks where they belong.
You already know it. Your phone rang at 8:47 PM, the AC was dead, the homeowner didn't leave a message, and tomorrow morning they called the next guy on Google. That's not a marketing problem — that's a math problem. And the math is brutal.
Two shops in the same town, same crew size, same Yellow Pages ad. One has Neuzenix installed. One doesn't.
Not a generic chatbot. Not a call center in a basement. A purpose-built system trained on the way your shop actually runs.
Answers every inbound call. Sounds like a person. Recognizes urgency vs. scheduled. Routes to dispatch. Never sick, never lunch, never holiday.
Any call that does fall through (rare) instantly triggers an SMS: "Sorry we missed you — what's the issue? Reply and we'll text the soonest slot." Recovers 30–50% of dropped calls.
When call volume triples during a heatwave, cold snap, or storm — AI takes the spillover. Your office manager handles the complex ones. Nothing drops.
Every customer who hasn't booked in 12 months gets an automated SMS sequence offering a tune-up. 3–8% reactivate. Pure recovered revenue from a list you forgot you had.
Every completed job triggers a review request — timed to land while the customer is still happy. 5–20 new Google reviews per month. Replies handled automatically.
All bookings route into your existing dispatch board — ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, Jobber, FieldEdge — or a clean Neuzenix one if you don't have one yet. Nothing rebuilt, nothing replaced.
Most contractors miss 20–40% of inbound calls and don't know it. Drop in your call volume and average ticket — this calculator shows the real monthly bleed.
Book a Fit CallThe system isn't generic. The intake questions, urgency rules, and dollar values are dialed in for your trade specifically.
"Storm day used to crush us. Phones rang nonstop, office manager melted down, and we'd find 18 voicemails by noon. First storm with Neuzenix, we booked 22 jobs we would have lost. Paid for the whole year in a week."
"First month we recovered $11K in calls that previously went to voicemail. After-hours emergency capture alone covered the retainer 7×. My wife (who runs the office) actually slept through a Saturday."
"I'm under a house running wire and the AI books my next panel upgrade estimate. That's wild. Six months in, the reactivation flow alone pulled $34K from customers I hadn't talked to in two years."
$300–$800/mo + per-call fees. Often offshore. No booking. No CRM hand-off.
An answering service takes a message. Neuzenix books the job, routes it to dispatch, and triggers follow-up. Messages don't pay your techs — booked jobs do.
$40K–$55K/year fully loaded. Sick days. Turnover. Vacation. Can only answer one call at a time.
One AI employee handles unlimited simultaneous calls, never calls in sick, costs less than a third of a hire, and includes booking, reviews, and reactivation. No payroll, no HR, no drama.
$49–$199/mo apps that just answer calls. No CRM, no reviews, no reactivation, no follow-up.
You bought a tool. We install an employee. The tool answers — the employee answers, books, follows up, asks for the review, and chases the dormant customer. Same monthly outlay, 5× the work done.
The default. Office manager pushes through. Phone drops calls during surges. Voicemails pile up.
You're already paying for "doing nothing" — it's just hidden in the $45K–$120K/year you lose to missed calls. Plugging the leak costs less than 2% of that, and it pays for itself in the first month.
Most home services shops land on the middle tier — full Capture, Convert, and Multiply automations running together. We'll confirm which one fits on your call.
Book a free 15-minute fit call. We'll audit your missed-call rate live, show you the math on your numbers, and tell you honestly if it's a fit — no obligation.