Missed-call recovery for water damage restoration companies · $249/month flat

The homeowner standing in rising water dials the next company the second your line rings out.

When a pipe lets go at 2am and the water is still climbing, the homeowner calls down a list until someone picks up — and the first company to answer usually keeps the job. RevenuePack answers that call, captures the address, the source, and how bad it is, and can ring a true emergency straight to your cell. Your number stays. Your team still answers first.

  • Your team gets the first ring; we take what you miss
  • The agent runs on rules you approve, word for word
  • Every call becomes a job record: who, what, where, when

$249 a month. Everything. That’s the sentence. Month to month, no setup fee—and any month it misses a forwarded call, the base fee is free.

Brown floodwater rising against a brick home with sandbags stacked at the door — a residential water-damage emergency a restoration crew would respond to; no worker is visible in the frame.
3:20 AM · Basement floodingTearing out wet drywall. Call goes to the next guy.
Captured02:14
New service callerAfter-hours overflow
UrgencyService needed soon

Keep your numberforward only the calls you want covered

Your team answers firstwe exist for the calls nobody could take

A job record, not voicemailwho called, what broke, how urgent, where

Why the calls slip

The reason you miss them is the reason they matter.

Your crews are on active losses — hauling extractors, tearing out wet drywall, gloved up in a gutted room — and the next emergency rings while the last one is still flooding. After hours, it rings to nobody at all.

  1. 01

    A pipe burst overnight and water is spreading across a finished basement.

  2. 02

    A storm pushed water under the door and into the ground floor at 3am.

  3. 03

    A sewage line backed up into the house over a holiday weekend.

Then there’s the season. A hard freeze or a summer storm turns a quiet night into a wall of flooding calls at once — every one of them dialing whoever answers first.

The cost of the miss

What one unanswered call is actually worth to a restoration company.

The trade-specific numbers are yours; the two below them are the whole home-services industry’s. Every figure carries its source—no stat without the receipt.

48%

of home-services callers never reach a live person

Invoca 2025 home-services benchmark, from 70M+ analyzed calls.

<3%

of callers sent to voicemail leave a message

Invoca, 2024. Voicemail is where the job goes to die quietly.

100×

better contact odds answering in 5 minutes versus 30

MIT/InsideSales study, 2007. Old study; the physics have not changed.

Put a price on doing nothing

The question is not whether $249 costs money. It is what the calls you miss already cost you.

One recovered $3,868 job (HomeAdvisor, 2026) covers the month fifteen times over. A flooded-basement cleanup runs $4,000 (HomeAdvisor, 2026), and the worst losses climb well into five figures — every one of them revenue, not margin.

We use actual pilot outcomes—your real jobs and their real value—not industry averages or demo activity, to judge whether it worked.

The proof you can dial

Call it right now. Try to trip it up.

We have no testimonials. We have a phone number. Give the agent a hard, real call—say a pipe burst and your basement is filling up, and try to make it lose the address or skip flagging it as an emergency—and hear what it captures. If a robot can’t survive you, it doesn’t deserve your overflow.

Three ways in, same robot: dial it, talk to it straight from this page, or type your number and it calls you.

Demonstration only. This line cannot dispatch service, contact a real provider, or confirm an appointment. Do not use it for an actual service need or emergency.

+1 (765) 200-9397Call RevenuePack now

Uses your microphone. Nothing is dialed.

US and Canada numbers. A few calls per day per person. The call comes from (765) 200-9397.

Objections, answered

The reasons a restoration company says no—said out loud.

The whole business is who shows up first — a robot won't win that.

That is exactly why it earns its keep. The agent picks up on the first ring at any hour, takes the address and the water source, and flags a real emergency to your cell — so you are the one calling back first. It books the visit; it does not pretend to be you.

People are panicking when they call — they need a person.

They get a calm voice taking their details instead of a voicemail box. Fewer than 3 in 100 callers leave a voicemail (Invoca, 2024), and someone watching their floor go under does not wait through your greeting — they dial the next company.

Most of my work comes through insurance and referrals.

The emergency calls still come in direct, and those are the ones that turn into the claim. The company that answers and gets there first usually writes the estimate — miss the call and you miss the file.

The rest of the questions—pricing, cancelling, emergencies—are on the main page

Founding pilot · one setup at a time

Buy the pilot. Hold us to the guarantee.

It is $249 because you are early and I need proof cases more than margin. Founding shops get the whole system, hands-on setup, and me directly. I do every setup personally, so pilots start one at a time—checkout holds your place in line.

  • One owner-approved intake agent, drafted from your website
  • One RevenuePack line and the exact forwarding code for your carrier
  • 500 AI call minutes every month; $0.30/minute after that
  • Emergency ring-through to your cell, announced before it connects
  • Structured call and job ledger, reviewed with you
  • Miss a call, month’s free—in writing

The next missed call is already dialing

You spent years making that phone ring.

$249 a month makes sure ringing is not where it ends. Month to month, no setup fee, miss a call and the month is free.

Start my pilot — $249/month