Every surge in water damage calls means another job you have to hold in your head. Here's what the operation looks like when dispatch and job coordination run without you in the middle.
You're standing in two inches of water across town. But this time, the call gets triaged, the urgency is flagged, and a crew is moving before you even check your phone.
Severity was assessed, the address and situation were captured, and the closest available crew was flagged for dispatch, all in the voice of your company.
Severity, address, source status, and crew assignment land in one record, sorted by priority, ready for your review without you being the switchboard.
The dispatch board handles the standard flow. You get pulled in when a decision only you can make is on the table.
Beacon Lane job requires licensed electrician for wet panel. Crew 2 requesting approval.
All other active jobs on track. 2 jobs completing drying phase today. No action required.
When the crew arrives and the scope changes, the customer hears about it automatically, so your field team works instead of managing phone calls.
The kind of triage and routing system a multi-crew operation relies on, configured for a restoration company where the owner is the coordination layer.
When every call gets triaged and every crew gets moving without you in the middle, your revenue stops being capped by how many jobs you can hold in your head at once.
If we're wrong, the conversation ends here. If we're close, this is rarely the only thing you're holding together by hand.
We built this from public information. How close did we get?
Tell us where we got it right, or where we missed. Under a minute.