Type:
Lead Grade: C
Name: Marcin (redacted)
Phone Number: (redacted)
Email Address: (redacted)
Address: (redacted)
City:
Intro:
Phone Staffer specializes in home service lead generation through cold calling and outbound marketing for home service companies. In this transcript, we cold called homeowners in (city name), (state) to generate a lead for exterior power washing and to offer a free, no-obligation estimate for decks, patios, siding, sidewalks, and driveways. The homeowner showed interest and a call with an estimator was booked for a Friday afternoon. This is a power washing lead, but the same approach would work well for roofing companies or other home services in (city name), (state). If you’re looking to get more leads for your home service company, outbound lead generation and cold calling for leads can drive booked appointments. Below is the redacted lead information to protect privacy.
Ai Transcript:
Phone Staffer Caller: Hello? Hello? Hello, are you with (redacted)? (redacted)? Yes. Yes, this is Terrence, by the way from (redacted) and I was just only reaching out to you because we do powerwashing at (redacted) so I just wanted to see if you guys.
Prospect: Powerwashing? You mean, what do you mean? Exterior Powerwashing if you would like to have a free estimate.
Phone Staffer Caller: Oh, so somebody call you for this or? Yeah, I just like reaching out if you know if maybe you were interested as well since we are just around the area. So what do you powerwash? It’s like a deck or something? Yes, we can do decks, patios, papers, whole house exteriors or maybe you have sidewalks, walkways. So how much you charge for the walkway and you know the deck? I’m not pretty sure about one so that’s why we offer the free estimate first and that way we can tell you how much it costs. So that’s the purpose of the free estimate. So there’s no obligation so there’s no contract to sign up? It’s a free estimate, right? Yes, estimate only. So maybe you can use it soon if you need to powerwash it, use the estimate we provide to you. So we’ll be there, we’ll be calling you on Friday. Is that okay? Friday? Yes, maybe afternoon between 3 to 5? I’m not sure, but you can check it. It will be like a phone call, like we can only do call.
Phone Staffer Caller: So that will be (redacted) Drive, approximately (redacted). And is this the best contact number? Any with (redacted)? This is the best number.
Prospect: Okay, I see. And your name is Zahra Redacted? Zahra Redacted, yeah.
Prospect: And by the way, do you have an email where we can send you all our details, the confirmation? You can call me, it’s fine.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, sure. We’ll send you over to your texts. Okay?
Prospect: So it’s on Friday, May 15th between 3 to 5. Thank you. Yeah, you can call me and check if I am there. Yeah, we can hook up with a phone call first there, so that we can talk with our estimator, okay? Okay.
Phone Staffer Caller: And this is the first time we had power washing. What is your company name? It’s (redacted). What is the name? Can you send it, text me the name? Yes, we can text it to your phone number. It’s (redacted). And by the way, is this the first time you had power wash, or do you have it before? Yeah, it’s the first time.
Prospect: Oh, perfect. Well, I think that’s it for me. Thank you so much, Zahra, and have a great day.
Most franchise owners hit the same wall with solar panel leads. They buy a batch from an aggregator, sales reps complain about bad numbers and renters, and the install calendar still has gaps two weeks out. The spend feels measurable, but the pipeline doesn't feel controlled.
That's the problem. You don't own the flow.
A scalable solar operation needs more than “more leads.” It needs a repeatable system that decides who to contact, when to contact them, what to say, and how to measure whether the appointment was worth setting in the first place. In practice, the strongest operators don't rely on one source. They build a lead engine that blends inbound with disciplined outbound, then they standardize it so each territory can run the same way.
Beyond Lead Buyers Owning Your Solar Lead Flow
A lot of franchisees start with lead marketplaces because they're easy to turn on. You can buy volume this week and hand names to your sales team tomorrow. That convenience hides its true cost.
In 2025, platforms like SolarReviews generated nearly 400,000 solar leads, with costs ranging from $25 for a shared inquiry to over $300 for an exclusive one according to GreenMatch's solar market summary. That tells you two things at once. Demand is large, and access to that demand is expensive.
What bought leads usually look like in the field
A territory manager buys a set of “exclusive” leads because the pitch sounds safe. Higher intent. Less competition. Faster close. Then the team starts dialing.
By midweek, the pattern shows up:
Some records aren't homeowners and were never install candidates.
Some prospects already talked to multiple installers and now use your rep to collect one more quote.
Some phone numbers are dead or routed to someone else.
Some households sound interested, but the roof, timeline, or utility profile doesn't fit.
None of that means lead buying never works. It means it's rented pipeline. You get whatever quality the seller decided to package, and your team spends valuable selling hours sorting the list.
Practical rule: If your reps are acting like data cleaners, your lead strategy is upside down.
What ownership looks like instead
Owned lead flow starts with territory logic, not a marketplace checkout page. You define where to target, what a viable solar household looks like, and what script should qualify it before a closer ever gets involved.
That changes the operating model in three ways:
Approach
What you control
What you don't control
Lead buying
Speed of purchase, volume ordered
Data quality, competition level, filtering depth
SEO and referrals
Brand visibility, trust signals
Search demand timing, referral pace
Outbound engine
List criteria, call timing, qualification standard
Some contactability limits, local compliance complexity
The shift matters most in multi-location businesses. A franchisor can't scale on guesswork and rep heroics. One branch might tolerate messy lead quality because a strong sales rep salvages bad opportunities. Another branch collapses under the same lead mix. That's why a system beats a source.
When you own the workflow, you can tune it. Tighten homeowner filters in one market. Adjust roof-fit rules in another. Change scripts for neighborhoods with high utility bills versus neighborhoods responding more to resilience and backup power. The result is less dependence on whoever sells leads this month and more control over appointment quality.
Choosing Your Solar Lead Generation Channels
Every serious solar operator ends up using some mix of PPC, SEO, referrals, lead aggregators, and outbound calling. The mistake is treating them like interchangeable taps. They aren't. Each channel solves a different problem.
The market is growing fast enough that weak channel choices get exposed quickly. The U.S. solar market posted a 21% year-over-year increase in installations in 2024, with continued growth projected for 2025, as noted by SolarReviews' solar leads overview. When demand expands, customer acquisition gets more competitive, not less.
How the main channels behave
A franchise partner in the Southwest once split budget across multiple sources because they didn't want to be overexposed to one channel. That instinct was right. The lesson was that each source needed a different expectation.
Channel
Best use
Main strength
Main trade-off
PPC
Immediate lead flow
Fast activation
Gets expensive when markets heat up
SEO
Long-term pipeline
Compounds over time
Slow to build
Referrals
Trust-heavy sales
Strong lead quality
Hard to forecast weekly volume
Lead aggregators
Quick volume
Simple to buy
Limited control over lead standards
Outbound calling
Territory expansion and predictable booking
Proactive targeting
Requires process discipline
What works for each channel
PPC
PPC is useful when a location needs appointments now. New territory launch, seasonal push, underbooked rep schedule. It's a volume lever. The problem is that it's reactive. You wait for a homeowner to search, click, fill out a form, and hope your team responds before someone else does.
SEO
SEO is what strong brands build even when they're already busy. It supports the whole system because homeowners research solar before they talk to sales. But SEO won't rescue a weak quarter on its own. It's an asset, not a short-term patch.
Referrals
Referrals usually bring cleaner conversations because trust is already present. But referral flow is uneven across franchise locations. Some operators assume “good work will generate referrals” and stop there. Better operators operationalize asks, follow-ups, and review capture.
Lead aggregators
Aggregators have a place. They can help fill a board or test a market. But they shouldn't become the spine of your business. Once your calendar depends on bought demand, the vendor has an advantage and you have less room to improve margin.
Why outbound changes the equation
Outbound isn't better because it's glamorous. It's better because it gives operators control. You choose the ZIP codes, the property type, the call windows, and the qualification rules. That matters in franchise systems where consistency matters more than one rep's instincts.
A useful starting point is deeper property data targeting for solar companies, especially if you're building local territory lists instead of buying generic records. Property data won't close deals for you, but it can stop your team from wasting dials on the wrong homes.
Good channel mix is simple. Use SEO and referrals to build brand equity. Use PPC when you need speed. Use aggregators sparingly. Build outbound if you want control.
Building Your Outbound Solar Lead Machine
The outbound side fails when owners treat it like “just have someone call a list.” A real solar lead machine has four moving parts, and if one is weak, the whole thing gets noisy fast.
Start with territory selection, not a list vendor
The first step is choosing where not to call. Too many teams build broad county lists, then hope the script sorts things out. That burns caller hours.
A better process starts with local demand signals and property fit. Pull target ZIP codes. Review neighborhood makeup. Separate owner-occupied residential stock from everything else. Then decide whether the territory needs a standard rooftop solar pitch, a backup-power angle, or a roof-challenge angle.
One of the most useful advanced tactics is hunting for micro-lead clusters. EnergySage's orientation and angle guidance supports a practical version of this. In cold-weather states, scraping ZIP codes for homes with winter-optimized 45-60° roof tilts can produce 28% more appointments when callers position the right solution for those homes.
That matters because many competitors still call broad lists with generic messaging.
Build the data stack in layers
Raw records aren't enough. The best outbound teams enrich every file before it reaches a caller.
A clean workflow usually looks like this:
Scrape target properties by ZIP code and ownership indicators.
Append contact data through skip tracing.
Match property attributes like roof shape, neighborhood type, and likely occupancy.
Push records into a score bucket so callers work the best opportunities first.
Here, operators often either save the campaign or poison it. If a caller has to discover during the first ten seconds that the contact rents, lives in an HOA dead zone, or owns a heavily shaded property, your backend did not do its job.
Treat calling like operations, not side work
A scalable outbound team needs dedicated infrastructure. Not one office admin making calls between invoices. Not a closer filling dead time with prospecting.
The operating pieces are straightforward:
Power dialer setup: Keep callers live in conversations, not manually punching numbers.
QA and supervision: Listen to calls, flag bad habits, and retrain quickly.
Disposition discipline: Every outcome gets tagged cleanly so your next pass is smarter.
Appointment standards: Don't reward booked meetings that were never qualified.
The fastest way to ruin outbound is paying for activity while tolerating sloppy dispositions.
Build a repeatable daily rhythm
Franchise systems need routines that survive staff changes. A basic daily rhythm works better than complicated theory.
Morning blocks usually work best for list review, score prioritization, and first-pass dials. Midday often handles follow-up attempts and reschedules. Late afternoon is useful for households that missed earlier contact windows. Managers should review recordings and disposition trends every day, not once a month.
For teams building both inside booking and field follow-through, a practical companion resource is this OnRoute field sales playbook. It's useful because the outbound appointment isn't the finish line. The handoff to field reps has to be clean or the front-end work gets wasted.
One overlooked play
Don't ignore homes that don't fit the “perfect south-facing roof” stereotype. In many markets, the available housing stock forces practical compromises. Well-trained callers can still book good opportunities when they understand how to frame alternative layouts and realistic production expectations.
That's where generic callers fail and trained solar callers win. The script doesn't need to sound technical for the sake of sounding smart. It needs to show enough competence that the homeowner trusts the appointment is worth taking.
Pre-Qualifying Leads to Eliminate Waste
The cheapest appointment is the one your team never had to rescue from a bad lead. In solar, pre-qualification does more for profit than clever scripting.
The reason is simple. A bad lead doesn't just waste a dial. It wastes skip-trace costs, caller time, manager review time, rep drive time, and sales bandwidth. Most franchise owners only see the wasted media spend because that's the visible line item.
Convoso's solar sales metrics article cites SEIA reporting that 55% of solar leads churn before a consultation because of mismatched expectations or poor qualification. That number lines up with what many operators feel in the field. Too many “leads” were never serious candidates.
The filter stack that matters
Strong pre-qualification is layered. One filter won't save you.
Property review: Look for roof size, shape, and likely shading issues.
Territory economics: Prioritize areas where the solar conversation makes financial sense.
Contact confidence: Flag records with weak or conflicting phone data.
Fit signals: Separate likely near-term prospects from research-only households.
A lot of teams overcomplicate this. They buy software, score everything, then still send weak records to callers because no one enforced a threshold. The rule should be brutal. If a record fails the baseline, it doesn't get dialed.
Use scoring to protect human time
Lead scoring works when it removes records from the queue, not when it creates fancy dashboards nobody obeys. That's why practical frameworks like MakeAutomation's lead scoring advice are useful. The value isn't the terminology. It's forcing your team to define what deserves attention first.
A simple franchise-friendly model might bucket leads like this:
Weak contact confidence or questionable install fit
Hold or suppress
That structure improves more than efficiency. It improves caller morale. Reps work better when the list gives them a fair shot at a real conversation.
Here's a useful training clip to pair with a qualification review process:
What a qualified solar lead should feel like
A qualified lead doesn't need to be ready to buy on the first call. That's a common mistake. They need to be plausible.
You want a homeowner with a property that appears workable, in a territory where the economics are credible, who stays on the phone long enough to explore an appointment. That's it. If your system demands perfect certainty before dialing, you'll starve the pipeline. If it accepts anything with a phone number, you'll bury the team in junk.
Pre-qualification is where solar margin gets protected. Every weak record you suppress saves money twice. Once in the call center, and again in the field.
Call Scripts and Objection Handling for Solar
Most bad solar calling scripts sound like pressure. Too much explanation, too early. The caller starts pitching equipment, financing, incentives, and savings before confirming the household should even be in the pipeline.
A good script does less. It identifies the homeowner, confirms basic fit, creates enough interest for a scheduled consultation, and gets off the phone.
What the script is actually for
The script is a control tool. It keeps callers from wandering, overselling, or booking junk appointments to hit quota. It also gives managers something concrete to coach.
As noted earlier, rapid response matters in solar lead handling. The same source also reports that calling within the first minute can boost conversions by 391%, which reinforces a practical principle from inbound lead management. Speed matters, but authority matters too. In outbound, you don't have a form fill trigger, so the script has to create confidence quickly while using a value-driven frame such as 25-30% energy savings.
Bad script versus good script
Bad version
“Hi, we're a solar company working in your area and we have great financing options, tax credits, battery systems, and installation discounts. Do you want a quote?”
This fails for three reasons. It sounds generic, it asks for too much too soon, and it invites an automatic brush-off.
Better version
“Hi, is this the homeowner at [street name]? We're reaching out to homeowners in your area who may qualify for a solar savings review. This isn't a sales visit today. I just wanted to see whether you've looked at what lower electric bills could look like for your home.”
That version works better because it does three jobs in sequence. It confirms the person, narrows the audience, and lowers the pressure.
Common objections and better responses
Objection
Weak response
Better response
Not interested
“Why not?”
“That's fair. Most people haven't looked closely yet. I'm only trying to see if your home is even a fit before anyone wastes your time.”
I'm busy
“This will only take a minute”
“Understood. Would later today or another day be better for a quick fit check?”
I already have quotes
“We can beat them”
“That helps. Then you already know the basics. A second review is only worth doing if your home may have options the first rep didn't explain.”
Solar doesn't work on my roof
“It definitely does”
“Maybe, maybe not. That's exactly why we qualify first instead of promising anything over the phone.”
“The call should earn the next step, not force the whole sale into one conversation.”
Script guardrails for franchise teams
When different branches start improvising, appointment quality usually drops. The best call frameworks leave room for natural wording but lock in a few essential elements:
Open with property confirmation
State a narrow reason for the call
Avoid quoting equipment details too early
Never promise savings before qualification
Book only when the homeowner agrees the review makes sense
One practical test is simple. If a new caller can read your script and still sound human after two coaching sessions, the script is usable. If they sound like a robot or skip half of it, rewrite it.
Tracking KPIs for a Profitable Solar Campaign
Most solar outbound dashboards track too much and reveal too little. You don't need twenty metrics. You need the few that tell you whether data quality, caller quality, and appointment quality are holding up.
The numbers that deserve executive attention
The most useful KPI set for solar panel leads is compact:
Contact rate: Are your records producing real conversations?
Sit rate: Are those conversations turning into qualified appointments?
Cost per appointment: What did it cost to book the meeting?
Close rate from sat appointments: Did the field team receive real opportunities or calendar filler?
For sit rate, AZoCleantech's solar performance benchmarking article notes that top-performing solar campaigns aim for a 15-18% contact-to-appointment rate, and that technically proficient scripts can help teams reach that benchmark while filtering out 70% of low-quality leads.
What each KPI tells you
A low contact rate usually points to data issues, weak phone appends, or poor call timing. The script isn't your first suspect there.
A weak sit rate with a decent contact rate usually means one of two things. The callers are talking to the wrong people, or the script is too vague to create confidence.
A disappointing close rate from sat appointments often exposes a front-end qualification problem. If the field rep keeps arriving at homes that were never viable, the call center may be winning the wrong game.
Keep the dashboard operational
A useful KPI board should answer these questions fast:
KPI
If it drops
Likely issue
Contact rate
Fewer live conversations
Bad data or wrong call windows
Sit rate
Fewer booked appointments
Script, training, or poor fit standards
Cost per appointment
Higher spend per booked meeting
Waste in targeting, staffing, or conversion
Close rate
Fewer installs from booked sits
Weak qualification or sales handoff
Manager's note: Review KPIs by list source, caller, and territory. Blended averages hide the real problem.
The key is not admiring the dashboard. It's reacting to it. If one ZIP code underperforms, cut it. If one caller books volume but poor-quality appointments, fix the behavior before it spreads.
Scaling Your System and Staying Compliant
Once one territory proves the model, the next challenge is keeping quality intact across multiple markets. At this point, franchise systems usually either mature or get messy.
Standardize before you expand
Write down the operating rules. Not broad principles. Actual rules.
That includes:
List criteria: What property types get pulled and which get excluded
Data vendors: Which skip-trace and enrichment tools are approved
Score thresholds: What reaches a caller and what gets suppressed
Script controls: What language is required and what claims are prohibited
Handoff process: What sales reps must receive before the appointment
Without this, every branch starts “tweaking” the system and you lose comparability.
Treat compliance as part of operations
Calling compliance isn't a legal footnote. It's part of campaign design. Scrub against applicable Do Not Call requirements. Train callers on consent boundaries and calling practices. Make sure your dialing setup and workflows align with current rules for the markets you serve.
The safest scaling model is simple. Centralize the hard parts, audit regularly, and don't let local teams freelance with list sourcing or script changes. The bigger the footprint, the more dangerous inconsistency becomes.
A solar franchise that wants stable lead flow doesn't need more random names. It needs a repeatable machine that finds good households, filters out bad ones, books clean appointments, and runs the same way in every territory.
If you want help building that kind of system, Phone Staffer helps home service companies generate appointments through outbound cold calling. They handle caller hiring, training, supervision, ZIP code scraping, skip tracing, and high-volume calling so franchise owners can focus on estimates, installs, and revenue.
Type:
Lead Grade: B
Name: Mehmet (redacted)
Phone Number: (redacted)
Email Address: (redacted)
Address: (redacted)
City:
Intro:
Phone Staffer specializes in home service lead generation through Cold Calling for leads and outbound lead generation. In this transcript, we cold called a homeowner in (city name), (state) to offer a free, no-obligation exterior power washing estimate. The homeowner agreed to a virtual estimator call and reserved a time slot for May 13 between 4:00–6:00 PM, expressing interest in power washing the exterior of the home. All personal details are redacted to protect privacy. This example illustrates how cold calling for leads can help home service companies get more business, and the same approach would also work well for roofing companies in (city name), (state). If you’re looking to boost your home service lead generation or scale outbound efforts to get more leads, this is a practical strategy.
Ai Transcript:
Phone Staffer Caller: Hello? Hello? Hello? Yeah, Hi.
Phone Staffer Caller: Hello. Is this Clark? Is this Mehmet?
Prospect: Yes. Hi Mehmet, I am coming here with (redacted). So we will be doing a Powerwashing work in some of your neighbors uhm at your place. And I would like to check if you are going to be interested in a free estimate to Powerwash.
Phone Staffer Caller: Sorry, what did you say?
Prospect: Powerwash. What are you going to do?
Phone Staffer Caller: Just a free estimate of Powerwashing.
Prospect: Oh, you mean the off-site?
Phone Staffer Caller: Yes, that’s correct. It’s just a free estimate, no obligation, no other charges and uhm you can weigh in your options too.
Prospect: Oh, gotcha.
Phone Staffer Caller: So uhm if you are going to be interested, this is just a virtual appointment. So that means the estimator will just be calling you over the phone for the estimate. So are you okay with that?
Prospect: Oh yeah, sure.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, great. So we actually have a schedule uhm which is going to be on, hold on. So that’s going to be on Wednesday, May 13. Are you okay with that? We have a time, a time frame which is 8 to 10, 10 to 12, 12 to 2, 2 to 4, and 4 to 6 PM. Which is your preferred time?
Prospect: This is for the estimate or for the actual job?
Phone Staffer Caller: For the estimate, just a free estimate for the exterior part of your house. So we’re offering this so you can also weigh in your options.
Prospect: Oh, gotcha.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay. So 4 to 6 please.
Prospect: 4 to 6 would be okay.
Phone Staffer Caller: Alright, so let me check. Okay, that will be on Wednesday, May 13 between 4 to 6 PM.
Phone Staffer Caller: Alright, so may I know, Mehmet, when was the last time you had your house power washed?
Prospect: Is it a year ago, a year ago? We haven’t done it since we bought the house. It’s been 5 years.
Phone Staffer Caller: 5 years.
Prospect: And also, what part of the house do you need some power washing? Is it the patio, gutters, or the full exterior part of the house?
Phone Staffer Caller: Oh, that I don’t know. You know that we have, our house is a townhome, right? Okay. It’s not a single house. Is it a townhouse? Something like that?
Prospect: Yes. But you own it. You own the house at (redacted)?
Phone Staffer Caller: Yes, we do.
Prospect: Oh, okay.
Phone Staffer Caller: Alright, so do you need a quotation for the full exterior of the house or just the patio, gutters? Which specific area of the house do you need power washing?
Prospect: Just the outside, probably. I don’t even know how the gutters work. The exterior of the house.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, no worries. I don’t know the gutters. I don’t know how they work because we don’t take care of it. The community, the HOA takes care of the gutters. But even if you have HOA, do you still want a free estimate for power washing?
Prospect: No. Just to be sure. No, just the outside, no gutters.
Prospect: So you would like us to proceed with the free estimate, is that correct?
Phone Staffer Caller: Yes.
Prospect: Okay.
Phone Staffer Caller: So, Mehmet, just to confirm, your full name is Mehmet (redacted), is that correct?
Prospect: Yes.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, and your number is ending at (redacted), correct?
Prospect: Yes.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, and your address is at (redacted), correct?
Prospect: Yes.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, and so just to confirm, do you have an email address where we can send the confirmation to?
Prospect: (redacted)
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, (redacted).
Phone Staffer Caller: So let me just repeat that. No, (redacted). Oh, sorry, sorry about that.
Phone Staffer Caller: (redacted). So let me repeat that. (redacted) at (redacted). Mehmet (redacted) at (redacted), correct?
Prospect: Yes.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, thank you.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, so just to confirm, your schedule for the estimator will call you on Wednesday. That is going to be on May 13 between 4 to 6 p.m. And you would need a quotation for the full exterior of the house, right?
Prospect: Okay, so will you be the one assisting the estimator, correct?
Phone Staffer Caller: Yes.
Prospect: Okay, great.
Phone Staffer Caller: So I think I got all that I need. So thank you so much for your time, Mehmet. And please wait for the call of the estimator on Wednesday, May 13, 4 to 6 p.m., okay?
Prospect: All right.
Phone Staffer Caller: Thank you so much for your time. You have a great day, okay?
Prospect: Thank you. You too.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, bye-bye.
Type: Power Washing
Lead Grade: B
Name: Amie (redacted)
Phone Number: (redacted)
Email Address: (redacted)
Address: (redacted)
City: Salt Lake City
Intro:
Phone Staffer specializes in Cold Calling for leads and Home service lead generation, using outbound marketing strategies to help service companies grow. In this Salt Lake City, UT transcript, we connected with a homeowner to schedule a free, no-obligation exterior power washing estimate. The conversation arranged a professional exterior assessment and booked a 2–4 p.m. appointment for Friday the 22nd. This is a power washing lead, but the same approach would work well for roofing companies in Salt Lake City, UT as well. If you’re looking to get more leads for your home service company through outbound efforts, this example illustrates how cold calling for leads can drive booked estimates. Below is the redacted information from the call to protect individual privacy.
Ai Transcript:
Phone Staffer Caller: Hey Amie, thank you for reaching me back. This is Rika of (redacted). How are you doing?
Prospect: Yes, okay and I appreciate you calling me back as well.
Phone Staffer Caller: We’re from (redacted) and we’re currently reaching out to homeowners in Salt Lake City because we are scheduling a free no obligation estimate for pressure washing house exteriors.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay ma’am. Our project manager will provide a free inspection for professional exterior power washing services.
Phone Staffer Caller: If you will be free on the 22nd, that will be Friday. Next next week, May 22. And they stop by between 2 and 4 p.m. only for 10 to 15 minutes only.
Prospect: Yes, we do understand that you may not be interested or perhaps you don’t need the service yet. This is not a service that you need to take right away.
Phone Staffer Caller: The good thing in here is it allows you to get a professional assessment. And it’s up for you to decide if you want to move forward or not.
Phone Staffer Caller: It’s completely no cost, no contract, and no charge at all.
Phone Staffer Caller: So we’ll set a date now, Friday the 22nd between 2 and 4 p.m. and just to confirm your full name ma’am, it’s Amie (redacted), right?
Prospect: Yeah.
Phone Staffer Caller: Is this the best phone number where the estimator can reach you at? (redacted) in the end ma’am?
Prospect: Yeah.
Phone Staffer Caller: The one that I’m calling right now, perfect.
Phone Staffer Caller: And the property you want to have an estimate with is (redacted). And of course this is in Salt Lake City, Utah with a zip code of (redacted). They got it right?
Prospect: Would you like my card info? No, we’re not getting card info here. Only basic information just for the estimator to know where they will stop by.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, and may I just ask, Amie, what part of your property would you like to have an estimate with? Do you want your whole house? Do you want your driveway, siding, front yard, back yard?
Prospect: The whole house.
Phone Staffer Caller: Alright, and can you remember ma’am, when was the last time you had this area power wash? Is it a year ago, two years ago?
Prospect: Two years ago.
Phone Staffer Caller: And did you hire someone to do the service for you? Or did you just power wash it by yourself?
Prospect: Yes? Yes. You hired someone? No, I did it by myself.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay, perfect then.
Phone Staffer Caller: And would you mind, okay, one last thing I needed here is your email address. Just to send the confirmation of your appointment then? (redacted)
Type: Power Washing
Lead Grade: B
Name: Jeffrey (redacted)
Phone Number: (redacted)
Email Address: (redacted)
Address: (redacted)
City: Saint Louis
Intro:
Phone Staffer specializes in home service lead generation through Cold Calling for leads and outbound outreach. In Saint Louis, MO, we reached out to a homeowner to offer a free exterior estimate for power washing, focusing on the detached garage. The call secured an appointment for May 21 between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m., with our estimator Div calling beforehand to confirm. The homeowner noted the last exterior cleaning was about five years ago. All private details are redacted to protect privacy. This is a power washing lead, but would also work well for roofing companies in Saint Louis, MO. Get more leads for your home service company by leveraging outbound marketing and cold calling for leads as shown in this transcript.
Ai Transcript:
Phone Staffer Caller: Hello? Hello? Oh, hi. Good day. Is that Jeffrey? Yeah. Hi Jeffrey. Good afternoon. This is Kate with (redcated). How are you doing? Good. What are you doing here?
Prospect: Yeah, actually I’m calling from (redcated) and we are just reaching out quickly to ask because she will be working in (redacted) area this week onwards. Just wondering and hoping if we could give you a free estimate in any part of your exterior while we are in the area.
Prospect: Sure. Perfect. May I know Jeffrey which area of your house would you like to have an estimate or do you usually clean for Powerwashing?
Phone Staffer Caller: We’ve got a detached garage that you can give me an estimate for. Detached garage. Got it here. And aside from your detached garage, is there any area that you would like to have an estimate or just this area?
Prospect: Probably just that garage. Garage.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay. And as I checked here, sir, is it okay to swing by on the 21st of this month, May 21st, Thursday? Sure. Is it okay to swing by like morning or afternoon? What will be the best time for you?
Prospect: Anytime works. I got it here. So as I checked here, sir, sorry, we have here between 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Would that be good? Sure.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay.
Prospect: And just to confirm a few details for Letigo, sir, your last name is Haddock, right?
Prospect: Got it here. And your best callback number will be this one, the (redacted) number?
Phone Staffer Caller: Yep.
Prospect: Okay. So our estimator will call you. His name is Div. He will call you first before arriving just to make sure that you are ready. And your address will be at (redacted). Yep.
Phone Staffer Caller: Perfect. And just to ask, sir, by any chance if you still remember, when was the last time that you did cleaning or power washed your garage?
Prospect: Probably in the last five years.
Phone Staffer Caller: Oh, five years. Maybe this is the right time as well since it’s five years. So yeah.
Prospect: Again, sir, this will be a free estimate. That will be Thursday on the 21st, and that will be between 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. And you will be the one who will assist our estimator, right?
Prospect: Yes.
Phone Staffer Caller: Okay. Perfect. And his name is Div. Expect a call before arriving.
Prospect: Thank you so much, Jeffrey, for your time. Have a great Wednesday. Bye-bye. Okay. Bye.