Here’s the truth. 85% of customers want a text response after a missed call. Not a voicemail. Not a callback hours later. A text. Right away.
Most contractors do nothing. The phone rings while they’re on a ladder or under a sink. They miss the call. The customer moves on to the next contractor. That’s $300 to $800 gone.
The fix is simple. Text them back in 60 seconds. Tell them you got their call. Tell them when you’ll call them. Give them an easy way to respond.
The Quick Answer
- Text back within 60 seconds of a missed call
- Keep it under 160 characters (one text message)
- Include your name and business
- Apologize briefly, then give them a next step
- SMS has a 98% open rate and 45% response rate
- Most customers prefer text over voicemail (72% response rate vs 20%)
Why Texting Back Matters
When you miss a call from a potential customer, you have about 5 minutes before they call your competitor. That’s it. Five minutes.
You can’t always answer the phone. You’re on a job. You’re driving. You’re talking to another customer. But you can send a text in 10 seconds. And that text keeps you in the game.
Customers don’t leave voicemails anymore. Only 20% do. The other 80% just hang up and call the next contractor. But if they get a text from you within a minute, 72% will respond. That’s the difference between losing the lead and booking the job.
What to Text Back After a Missed Call
The best text is short, apologizes quickly, and gives them a clear next step. Something like this:
That text does four things. It identifies who you are. It explains why you missed the call. It promises a callback with a specific time. And it gives them the option to text instead of waiting. Most people will respond to that within 5 minutes.
Keep it under 160 characters if possible. That way it sends as one message, not two or three. Shorter is better. Get to the point fast.
Text back within 60 seconds if you can. Within 5 minutes at the latest.
The faster you respond, the more likely they are to reply. If you text back in 30 seconds, you’ll get a response from 70% to 80% of people. If you wait 10 minutes, that drops to 40%. If you wait an hour, you might get 10% to respond. The lead goes cold fast.
This is why automation helps. You can set up a system to auto-send a text the second you miss a call. You don’t have to stop what you’re doing. The text goes out automatically. Then you follow up manually when you’re free. But at least the customer knows you got their call and you’re going to respond.
Text first. Then call within 30 minutes.
Texting first buys you time. The customer knows you’re going to call. They’re not sitting there frustrated wondering if you got their message. And a lot of times, they’ll just text you back with what they need instead of waiting for a call. That saves both of you time.
After you send the text, follow up with a call as soon as you can. But the text is your insurance policy. Even if they don’t pick up your call, they’ve already gotten a message from you. You’re still in the conversation.
Set up an automated text response. It sends within 60 seconds of the missed call without you touching your phone.
You can’t stop working every time your phone rings. But you also can’t afford to lose leads. Automation solves this. The system detects the missed call and fires off a pre-written text immediately. The customer gets a response. You finish your work. Then you follow up when you’re done.
Most CRM systems and phone apps can do this for under $50 a month. It’s one of the best investments a contractor can make. You don’t lose leads just because you’re busy.
Short. Under 160 characters if you can. One text message.
People don’t read long texts from businesses. They skim. If your text is three paragraphs, they’ll ignore it. Keep it to one or two sentences. Say who you are, why you missed the call, and what happens next. That’s it.
That’s 144 characters. Perfect. It’s polite, clear, and gives them two options. They can wait for a call or text you now. Either way, you’ve responded.
Include your name, your business name, a quick apology, and a next step. Those four things.
Name: So they know it’s a real person, not a robot.
Business: So they remember who you are if they called three contractors.
Apology: Shows you care about their time.
Next step: Tells them what happens now.
Don’t include a sales pitch. Don’t explain how long you’ve been in business. Don’t ask them to visit your website. Just respond to the fact that they called. Keep it simple.
For HVAC, most calls are urgent. Broken AC in summer. Dead furnace in winter. Your text should acknowledge that urgency.
That text does two things. It prioritizes emergencies. And it sets clear expectations for non-emergencies. If they text YES, you know to drop what you’re doing and call them. If they don’t respond, you follow up later without feeling rushed.
HVAC leads go cold faster than any other trade. If someone’s AC is broken and it’s 95 degrees, they’re not waiting around. Respond fast and you’ll book the job.
Plumbing calls are almost always urgent. Leaks, clogs, broken water heaters. Your text should show you understand that.
By asking them to describe the problem via text, you accomplish two things. You qualify the urgency. And you get details you need to give them a quote or prepare the right tools. If they text “toilet won’t stop running,” you know it’s not an emergency. If they text “water pouring from ceiling,” you know to hurry.
Plumbing converts at the highest rate of any trade when you respond fast. Don’t let these leads slip away.
Electrical calls range from urgent (power out, sparking outlet) to routine (install ceiling fan). Your text should help you figure out which one it is.
By asking what kind of work they need, you qualify the lead. If they text “outlet not working,” you know it’s routine. If they text “burning smell from breaker box,” you know it’s urgent. That helps you prioritize.
Electrical work isn’t always as time-sensitive as HVAC or plumbing, but customers still expect a fast response. Text them back quickly and you’re already ahead of most electricians.
Roofing leads usually come after a storm or when someone notices a leak. They want an estimate, but they’re also in a hurry to get it fixed before more damage happens.
Roofers win by being the first to show up for the estimate. If you can get their address via text and offer a free inspection tomorrow, you’re way ahead of the roofers who call back three hours later with a vague “I’ll come out sometime this week.”
Roofing jobs are big. Average ticket is $8,000 to $15,000. Losing a lead because you didn’t text back fast enough is expensive.
After-hours texts should set expectations and offer an emergency option if needed.
That text manages expectations. They know you’re closed. They know when you’ll call. And if they really need help tonight, they can text URGENT. If they don’t text URGENT, you know it can wait until tomorrow.
62% of contractor leads come after hours. If you’re not texting these people back, you’re losing more than half your potential business.
Use both. Your first name and your business name.
People want to know they’re texting with a real person, not a robot. Using your name makes it personal. But they also might have called three contractors, so using your business name reminds them who you are.
That’s the formula. First name + business name. Simple and clear.
Ask them. That’s the whole point of the text.
By asking them to describe the problem, you get two things. You qualify the lead (is it worth your time?). And you get enough info to prepare for the callback. If they text “toilet clogged,” you know what to expect. If they text “water heater leaking,” you know to prioritize it.
Don’t be afraid to ask questions via text. Most people would rather text a quick answer than play phone tag.
Yes. About 30% to 40% of customers will book via text if you make it easy.
After your initial text, if they respond with their problem, you can often close the deal without a phone call. Text them a price range, ask for their address, and offer a time slot.
You: “That’s usually a $150-$200 fix. I can come out tomorrow at 10am or 2pm. Which works better? Send me your address and I’ll put you on the schedule.”
If they send you their address and pick a time, you’ve booked the job. No phone call needed. This works especially well for routine, low-cost work where people don’t need a lot of hand-holding.
The biggest mistake is waiting too long. Second biggest is writing too much.
If you wait 2 hours to text back, the lead is already gone. They called someone else. They booked someone else. Your text shows up and they ignore it.
And if your text is three paragraphs long, they won’t read it. Keep it short. One or two sentences. Get to the point.
That’s 400+ characters. Way too long. No one reads that. This is better:
Short. Clear. Actionable. That’s what works.
Yes, but keep it short. One or two words. “Sorry I missed you” or “Sorry I missed your call.”
Don’t grovel. Don’t write a paragraph about how busy you are or how many jobs you’re working. Just acknowledge that you missed their call and move on to the next step.
That’s enough. You apologized. You explained briefly. You offered a solution. Done.
Follow up. Text them again in an hour. Then call them. Then text again the next day.
Just because someone doesn’t respond to your first text doesn’t mean they’re not interested. They might be busy. They might have gotten distracted. You need to follow up at least 4 to 6 times before you give up.
Here’s a good sequence:
Minute 1: First text (automated)
Minute 30: Call them
Hour 2: Second text if no response
Day 2: Third text
Day 3: Final text
Most contractors give up after one text. Don’t do that. Follow up persistently.
No. Keep it professional. No emojis.
You’re a contractor, not a teenager. Emojis make you look unprofessional. Stick to plain text. Clear and direct.
The one exception might be a simple thumbs up if a customer confirms an appointment. But in your initial missed call text? No emojis.
Just ask directly. “What’s your address?” or “Send me your address and I’ll swing by tomorrow.”
Don’t be shy. If you’re going to give them a quote or schedule a visit, you need their address. Most people will text it to you without hesitation.
You: “Got it. What’s your address? I can come out tomorrow morning to take a look.”
Once you have their address, you’re halfway to booking the job. You’ve qualified the lead and you’ve got their location. Now you just need to nail down a time.
Yes, but only if they’ve already shown interest. Don’t lead with it.
Your first text should be personal. A callback offer. Not a link to a website. But if they respond and ask about scheduling, then sure, send them a booking link.
Customer: “Either works”
You: “Great. Pick a time here: [link to scheduler]”
That’s the right sequence. Engage first. Then send the link after they’ve committed.
Speed and clarity. If you text them back in 60 seconds and tell them exactly what happens next, they’ll respond.
People respond when they feel heard and when the next step is obvious. If your text says “Sorry I missed you, I’ll call you in 20 minutes,” they know what to expect. They’ll wait for your call or text you back.
If your text is vague like “Thanks for calling, we’ll get back to you soon,” they’re not going to respond. “Soon” could mean anything. Be specific. Give them a time.
No. Not in the first text. Wait until you know what they need.
Your first text is just about acknowledging the missed call and setting up a conversation. Pricing comes later, after you know the scope of work.
If they ask about pricing in their reply, then you can give a range. But don’t lead with price. Lead with responsiveness.
Text them back anyway. Tell them you’re booked but offer to put them on the schedule.
A lot of people will wait if you respond fast and give them a specific date. But if you don’t respond until the next day, they won’t wait. They’ll hire someone else.
Fast response builds trust even when you’re busy. It shows you’re professional and organized.
Text them once. Then call them as soon as you can.
If someone called you three times in 10 minutes, they’re urgent. Don’t send them three automated texts. Send one, then prioritize calling them back. Multiple missed calls = emergency or very motivated customer.
That acknowledges the situation and promises a fast callback. Then actually call them in 5 minutes.
Yes. You should automate your initial text. It’s the only way to guarantee a 60-second response time.
Automation doesn’t mean impersonal. You can write a text that sounds human and helpful. The customer doesn’t need to know it was automated. They just care that they got a response.
After the automated text goes out, you take over manually. You respond to their replies. You have the actual conversation. But that first text? Automate it. It’s too important to leave to chance.
Automated texts go out instantly without you doing anything. Manual texts are ones you write and send yourself.
The best approach is to automate the first text, then handle follow-ups manually. That way you guarantee speed (automated) but still have real conversations (manual).
A lot of contractors worry that automated texts feel robotic. They don’t have to. If you write a good template that sounds natural, customers can’t tell the difference.
At least 4 texts over 3 days. Then move on.
Text 1: Immediately after missed call
Text 2: Two hours later if no response
Text 3: Next day
Text 4: Day after that
If they don’t respond after 4 texts and a couple calls, they’re either not interested or they hired someone else. Don’t keep texting them. It’s annoying and it wastes your time.
Text them back whenever they call. Even if it’s 9pm.
If someone calls you at 8pm, they’re not expecting you to answer. But they are expecting some kind of response. An automated after-hours text is perfect for this.
Don’t wait until the next morning to send that text. Send it immediately. Then follow up in the morning like you promised.
Text them anyway. Most people don’t check voicemail. But they always check texts.
If they left a voicemail, your text can reference it.
That shows you listened to their voicemail and you’re taking action. Even though they left a message, the text keeps them engaged while you finish what you’re doing.
You can use the same template, but personalize it slightly. Change the timing based on when you’ll actually be available.
Your template might be: “Hi, this is [NAME] from [BUSINESS]. Sorry I missed your call. I’m on a job and can call you back in [TIME]. Or text me what you need and I’ll respond ASAP.”
Then you fill in NAME, BUSINESS, and TIME each time. Or if you’re automating it, those fields get filled in automatically.
The structure stays the same. The details change based on the situation.
You don’t need their name. Just skip it. Start with “Hi” or “Hello.”
You don’t need to say “Hi John” or “Hi there.” Just “Hi” works fine. It’s polite and not overly formal. Don’t stress about not knowing their name.
Yes. Always. Tell them what to do next.
“Text me back” or “I’ll call you in 20 minutes” or “Send me your address” are all clear calls to action. Don’t leave them hanging. Tell them the next step.
Texts without a clear next step get ignored. Texts with a specific action get responses.
Doesn’t matter. Text them back fast and you’ll win even if you’re not the cheapest.
78% of customers hire the first contractor who responds. If you text back in 60 seconds and your competitor calls back in 3 hours, you win. Even if they’re cheaper.
Speed signals professionalism and reliability. Customers assume that if you respond fast to their inquiry, you’ll show up on time and do good work. Slow response makes them question everything.
Tell them you’re going to call. Give them a time. Then call.
Then actually call them in 15 minutes. Don’t say 15 minutes and call in an hour. If you’re not going to be available in 15 minutes, say 30 or 60. Just be accurate.
The text sets the expectation. The call closes the deal. Both are important.
If you text back within 60 seconds, you’ll convert 30% to 50% of those leads. That’s huge.
Compare that to not texting at all. If you just let the call go to voicemail and hope they call back, your conversion rate is under 10%. Most people won’t call back.
SMS has a 45% response rate. Email has a 6% response rate. Voicemail has a 20% callback rate. Texting is by far the best way to re-engage a missed call.
A lot of them do, yes. 67% of customers prefer texting for customer service and support. And 72% respond to texts vs 20% who respond to voicemails.
Texting is less intrusive. They can respond when they have time. They don’t have to answer the phone while they’re in a meeting or driving. And the conversation is documented, so there’s no confusion about what was said.
That doesn’t mean you should skip the phone call. But starting with a text gives customers options. Some will text you back. Some will wait for your call. Either way, they appreciate the flexibility.
Set up automation so the text goes out without you touching your phone. Never text and drive.
Automated missed call texts exist specifically for this reason. You miss a call while driving. The system sends a text automatically. You pull over when it’s safe and follow up manually. But the customer already got a response.
Don’t ever text manually while driving. It’s not worth it. Automate it or wait until you’re stopped.
Track your response rate. If 40% to 50% of people respond to your text, it’s working. If only 10% respond, something’s wrong.
Most CRM systems and texting platforms give you analytics. They’ll show you how many texts were delivered, how many were opened (98% usually), and how many got a response. If your response rate is low, your text is either too long, too slow, or too vague.
Test different versions. Try shorter texts. Try different wording. See what gets the best response rate.
Yes. Emergency texts should acknowledge urgency and promise a faster callback.
That text prioritizes emergencies. If they text YES, you know to drop everything. If they don’t, you know it can wait.
You can’t treat a burst pipe the same as a leaky faucet. Your texts should reflect that.
Answer it. Then transition to a call if needed.
If they text “How much to fix a running toilet?” you can text back a price range. “Usually $150-$200 depending on the issue. I can come out tomorrow at 10am to take a look. What’s your address?”
Some conversations can happen entirely via text. Some need a call. Read the situation. If it’s a simple question, text is fine. If it’s complicated, say “Let me call you in 5 min so we can go over the details.”
Yes, but only if they ask or if it helps close the deal.
Don’t send unsolicited photos of your truck or your logo. That’s spam. But if they ask to see examples of your work, sure, send a photo. Or if you want them to send you a photo of the problem, ask for it.
Photos can be helpful for qualifying leads. If they send you a picture and it’s a $50 fix, you know. If it’s a $2,000 problem, you know that too.
Let them know politely. Then ask if you can help anyway.
Sometimes people call the wrong contractor. Or they called multiple contractors and forgot who was who. A polite text can turn that into a lead. Worst case, they say “sorry, wrong number” and you move on.
Professional but not stiff. Like you’re talking to a neighbor, not writing a legal document.
Don’t write “We regret that we were unable to answer your telephone inquiry.” Write “Sorry I missed your call.”
Don’t write “We would be delighted to assist you with your plumbing needs.” Write “I can help. What’s going on?”
Be clear, friendly, and direct. That’s the tone that works.
That’s a good problem. It means your system is working. Hire someone to help or use better CRM tools to manage the volume.
If you’re getting 50+ text conversations a week, you can’t handle that alone. Bring in an office manager or virtual assistant to help triage. Or use AI tools that can handle initial qualification before you jump in.
Don’t turn off your text responses just because you’re busy. That’s throwing away money. Figure out how to scale.
Text everyone. Even existing customers appreciate a quick text response.
If an existing customer calls and you miss it, text them. “Hi John, sorry I missed you. Everything okay with the work we did last month? I’ll call you in 20 min.”
Existing customers are even more valuable than new customers. Don’t ignore their calls just because they’ve hired you before.
Massive. If you’re missing 10 calls a week and each lead is worth $500 on average, that’s $5,000 a week in lost revenue. $20,000 a month.
A missed call text system costs $50 to $200 a month depending on features. If it recovers even 5 of those 10 missed calls, you’re making an extra $10,000 a month. That’s a 50x to 200x ROI.
This is one of the highest-ROI investments a contractor can make. The payback period is days, not months.
Give them a range if you can. Or tell them you need more info and you’ll call them.
You: “Usually $150-$250 depending on the issue. I can swing by tomorrow morning and give you an exact quote. What’s your address?”
Giving a range shows you’re transparent. It also sets expectations. If they balk at $150-$250, they’re not a good fit anyway. If they send you their address, they’re ready to move forward.
No. Not in the first text. Save that for the phone call or your website.
Your first text is about response and next steps. If you start listing your certifications or how long you’ve been in business, it sounds like a sales pitch. Customers don’t care about that yet. They just want to know you got their call and you’re going to help them.
Don’t text back obvious spam numbers. Most systems can filter these out.
If you’re using automation, set it to only text back numbers that are valid mobile numbers. Landlines and VOIP numbers often indicate spam. Your CRM or texting platform should have filters for this.
If you accidentally text a spam number, it’s not a big deal. They won’t respond anyway. But over time, you’ll learn to spot the patterns and filter them out.
Any CRM that integrates texting and tracks conversations. Popular options include GoHighLevel, ServiceTitan, Jobber, and Housecall Pro.
The key features you need are: missed call detection, automated text sending, conversation tracking, and follow-up reminders. Most contractor-focused CRMs have these built in.
Don’t try to manage text conversations in your personal phone. You’ll lose track. Use a system that keeps everything organized and gives you visibility into response rates and conversion.
You can, but it’s not ideal. Personal and business texts get mixed together. You lose track of conversations. And if you ever hire someone, you can’t hand off the texting to them.
Use a business phone number or a texting platform that’s separate from your personal phone. That way your business communications are organized and professional.
Yes. A follow-up text is a great way to get reviews and repeat business.
That text accomplishes two things. It shows you care about quality. And it makes it easy for them to leave a review. Most customers will do it if you ask and provide a link.
Stop immediately. And apologize.
Then make sure their number is flagged in your system so you don’t accidentally text them again. Respect their preferences. Some people just don’t like texts.
Speed and clarity. Text back in 60 seconds. Tell them what happens next.
Everything else is secondary. If you text back fast and give them a clear next step, you’ll convert 30% to 50% of those leads. If you wait an hour or send a vague message, you’ll lose them.
Most contractors overcomplicate this. They write long texts. They wait too long. They don’t follow up. Keep it simple. Fast response. Clear message. Persistent follow-up. That’s how you win.
Tools to Help You Never Miss a Lead
Texting back fast can save jobs that would otherwise be lost. These tools make it automatic:
- Automated Missed Call Text System – Respond in 60 seconds every time
- Contractor CRM with SMS – Track every conversation and never lose a lead
- Missed Call Calculator – See how much revenue you’re losing from unanswered calls
- Text Response Templates – Copy-paste scripts that actually work
- Follow-Up Sequence Builder – Automate your text follow-ups
Stop Losing Jobs From Missed Calls
A simple text at the right time can win the job.
85% of customers want a text response after a missed call. If you’re not texting back, your competitors are.
Set up automated missed call texts and never lose another lead.
Get Automated Text System Get Contractor CRMTurn every missed call into a booked job.