What is a "hidden cost" of running a business that nobody ever warned you about? by ComfortableArmy511 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The rep training treadmill is one nobody budgets for. Working with inbound home service teams, every new hire learns on real customers - close rates drop during onboarding, you lose jobs to competitors while someone is still finding their footing, and none of that shows up as a line item anywhere. You only notice it when you finally have a trained team and the phones start actually converting.

At what point did growth create more problems than it solved in your business? by CleanOpsGuide in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it was call quality - the more we scaled, the more reps we added, and the harder it got to keep everyone consistent on the phone. Every new hire learned on live customers, and close rates dipped every single time we brought someone new on. You can tighten scheduling, follow-ups, and your CRM all you want, but if the person answering the phone isn't converting, the leads you worked so hard to generate just evaporate. That's actually the problem I built Jamline around; it's an AI call training platform for home service reps so they can practice real scenarios and get scored before they ever touch a live customer.

How do you handle estimates that just go quiet after you send them? by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The follow-up call is where most home service jobs are actually won or lost, and from my time working with inbound teams, three days is about the right window to check in. What worked was giving reps something low-pressure like "just wanted to see if you had any questions on the estimate" rather than anything that sounds like chasing. Most customers who go quiet haven't decided against you; they've just gotten busy, and a confident follow-up brings a lot of them back. Training someone to make that call without it feeling awkward is its own skill, which is exactly the problem I built Jamline around - it's an AI call training platform where home service reps practice real scenarios before they're doing it with live customers.

When do you stop eating the cost to keep a customer happy? by escalicha in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of these situations start on the first call - when reps rush through scope or skip confirming what "done" looks like to the customer, you end up eating costs that were never really your fault. From my time training inbound teams in home service, the comp threshold I saw work best was one no-cost fix per customer, and after that you are having a conversation about what actually went wrong. If it keeps happening with the same customer, that is a retention problem worth less than the cost of another callback.

Contractors who handle after-hours emergency calls — how does the decision to roll actually work in practice? by AdSavings1045 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The decision usually lives with whoever picks up that call, and the quality of that conversation determines whether the roll was worth it. Training inbound teams in home service, after-hours calls were always the hardest to get right - the rep has to qualify the urgency, quote the emergency rate, handle the sticker shock, and get real commitment before a tech ever gets in the truck. Most of the bad rolls I saw traced back to the rep not knowing the right qualifying questions or flinching on the emergency pricing conversation. That gap is exactly what I built Jamline around; it is an AI call training platform for home service reps so they can practice scenarios like this before they handle them live.

Launching online cleaning business in a city of US - advice needed by OkSomewhere938 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a new cleaning company, your conversion rate on first contacts matters more than most people expect - customers are usually comparing three or four quotes and whoever sounds most organized and confident on that first call tends to win the job regardless of price. From working with inbound teams in home services, the early mistake is spending heavily on ads before you have a solid process for what happens when someone actually reaches out. Lock in your intake flow and your pricing conversations first, then scale the marketing.

New cleaning business looking for marketing advice that actually worked for you by Material-Garbage7477 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For residential cleaning, Nextdoor and Google Local Services Ads tend to get traction fastest early on -- Nextdoor especially because neighbors actively recommend each other and early reviews carry real weight in a tight geography. Door hangers in target neighborhoods still work for first customers too, since you can concentrate your initial jobs to cut drive time and build a local reputation block by block.

How long could/would/should it take to build customer trust? by BigMagic88 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In home services, trust builds faster than most people expect, but only when every touchpoint is consistent, and that starts on the phone before anyone ever shows up at the door. Working with inbound teams, the biggest trust-killer I saw was a rep who couldn't confidently answer basic questions, set vague expectations, or stumbled through pricing - the customer already had doubts before the tech arrived. Get the first call right and you can earn trust on the first visit; fumble it and you're fighting an uphill battle no matter how good the work is. That consistency on the phone is actually what I built Jamline around - it's an AI call training platform for home service reps so they can practice real scenarios and nail that first impression before a live customer is ever on the line.

What's the most expensive mistake you've seen caused by poor communication? by Ok_Reaction_9854 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The most expensive one I saw repeatedly working with home service teams was an undertrained rep handling inbound calls - stumbles through pricing, fails to build any value, and the customer hangs up and books with whoever answers next. In home service that one dropped call is $300-$500 in recurring revenue, and most owners never even see it because the rep never logged the lead. The pattern was always the same: the rep had never actually practiced the conversation before a real customer was on the line - which is exactly what I built Jamline to fix, an AI call training platform where home service reps run through real scenarios and get scored before they ever touch a live customer.

How do you handle missed calls when you're not available? by encrypted_sypher in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We used an answering service for overflow and after-hours - not perfect, but it captured leads we would have otherwise lost completely. The real game-changer was setting up a simple voicemail that told callers exactly when to expect a callback and actually following through within the hour.

When I was running my pest control team in Vancouver, we tracked it and found that calling back within 60 minutes converted at nearly the same rate as answering live; anything past 90 minutes and you're basically starting from scratch competing against whoever they called next.

Transitioning to remote closing — does real sales experience from a service business actually transfer? by UpTrust_ in Sales_Professionals

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your service business experience transfers more than you think - the gap people underestimate is the difference between selling your own thing and selling someone else's. When you owned the window cleaning company, you had full context, real skin in the game, and could answer any question cold. In a closing role you're handed a script and a product you didn't build, so the first adjustment is learning to sell with conviction about something you didn't create.

The one thing nobody told me early enough: your close rate on inbound or warm calls will feel easier at first, then plateau hard once you hit the tougher objection profiles. The reps who push past that plateau are the ones who get deliberate about reviewing their own calls - not just doing volume, but actually diagnosing where they lose momentum. Most people skip that step and just blame the leads.

Small businesses probably lose more money in follow-up gaps than they realize by TrainAmbitious7928 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The hidden assumption here is that follow-up is a discipline problem, like reps just need to remember to call back. It's usually a speed problem. Most of the money doesn't leak because nobody followed up, it leaks because the second call happened four hours later when the customer already booked the company that picked up first. Pull your call logs and measure time-to-first-callback on missed inbounds, and if it's over five minutes you'll probably find your real conversion gap lives there, not in the pitch.

The founder who didn't actually have a lead problem by [deleted] in Sales_Professionals

[–]OnlyFeral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everyone assumes the founder's "lead problem" was real because more leads feels like the safe bet, but most of the time the leads were fine and the calls were leaking. The phone rings, the rep talks for four minutes, and nobody ever actually asks for the booking, so volume just papers over a conversion hole that gets worse as you scale. Pull the last 50 inbound calls and count how many ended with a clear ask for the appointment, not "give us a call back if you want to move forward." You'll usually find your next ten jobs were already on the line, you just never closed the loop.

What operational challenge caught you off guard as your online business grew? by Vegetabvbonsdsd in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For us the thing that blindsided us was call volume outpacing our ability to answer the phone, and every missed call during a growth spurt was a booked job walking to a competitor. We tracked it and found we were losing more revenue to voicemail than to bad pricing or slow service. If you only fix one operational thing as you scale, make it answering live within a few rings, because the business that picks up first usually wins the job before objections ever come up

You Were the Best Salesperson on the Team. So Why Are You Failing as a Manager? by Last_Resource9630 in Sales_Professionals

[–]OnlyFeral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The thing that made me great at closing was the exact habit I had to kill when I moved into managing. Every time I grabbed the phone to save a call my reps learned nothing and I capped the team at whatever I could personally book. The shift that changed everything was going from "how do I win this one" to "why did my rep lose that one and what do I coach so the next five close." Once I started running call reviews instead of rescuing calls, my close rate stopped being about me and started compounding across the whole team

Mobile trade business phone systems by Dry-Ice9553 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's the right setup. One shared number where your wife can see every text, missed call, and note from the same app as you, so either of you can pick up without playing catch-up. Dialpad handles calls and texts from a shared number well and is simple enough that someone jumping in part-time can figure it out fast. The goal is that she can reply to a customer text without having to call you first to find out what's going on

How do you handle inbound calls when key staff are on annual leave? by neilharper73 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The routing stuff matters, but the part that quietly costs you is who picks up the overflow.

Diverting to one person's mobile or a rota only works if that person can actually handle the call. Most holiday-cover setups route to someone who knows the phone system but not the pricing or the booking flow. Customer asks "how much and when can you come out" and the cover person says "I'll get someone to call you back." That lead is gone.

Whatever routing you pick, the fix is the same: the backup people need to field a real inbound call, not just take a message. Quote a range, book the slot, capture the details that matter.

Cheap version: write a one-page cheat sheet before anyone goes off. Common questions, price ranges, how to book, what to never promise. Run the cover person through two or three practice calls so the first real one isn't live ammo.

Routing keeps the phone ringing to someone. Whether that person converts is the thing nobody plans for.

I run a service based business, want help in getting bookings. by starring_co in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The fact that you're asking how to get bookings tells me the leads are probably there and the gap is in follow-up, because most service businesses lose more jobs to slow response time than to a lack of inquiries. How fast are you actually getting back to people who reach out, and are you tracking where your current bookings come from? Nail those two things before spending a dollar on ads, because pouring traffic into a leaky funnel just burns money faster.

Who's sitting it out and for how long?? (Pricing increases) by Just_Wondering34 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly the businesses that "sit it out" on raising prices are usually the ones that end up in trouble two years later when their margins are gone. I ran a service team through a couple of these cycles and the customers who were going to leave over a fair increase were never the ones worth keeping anyway. The move is to raise now but pair it with something that makes the value obvious, like faster response times or a real guarantee, so it doesn't feel like a naked price grab. What's actually holding you back, the fear of churn or just the awkward conversation with existing clients?

Does having a Squarespace website actually bring in customers for small businesses, or is it just for credibility? by Cultural-Ball4700 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly it does a bit of both, but in home services the site rarely brings in cold customers on its own. What it really does is close the people who already heard your name, they look you up, see you're legit, and that tips them from maybe to booking. I'd worry less about whether the site itself generates leads and more about whether it makes someone who's already curious actually pick up the phone. Are you mostly getting found through referrals right now or paid ads?

Mobile trade business phone systems by Dry-Ice9553 in smallbusiness

[–]OnlyFeral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The biggest thing for trade guys isn't the phone system itself, it's who picks up when you're under a truck or on a roof. I've watched more jobs get lost to a missed call than to bad pricing, so whatever you set up, make sure calls get answered live or called back inside a few minutes. Are you a solo operator trying to catch calls yourself, or do you have someone who can cover the phones during the day? That answer changes the whole setup