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Operations

How fast should you call back a service lead?

2026-05-10 · 7 min read · By Asad Mohammad

A dispatcher at a Toronto HVAC shop pulls into the parking lot at 7:42am with her usual coffee. She checks the inbound voicemail queue from overnight. Six calls. She starts dialing back. The first homeowner answers and says she already booked someone else. So does the second. So does the fourth. By 9am, two of the six are jobs. The other four are gone.

The dispatcher isn't bad at her job. She's just an hour or two too late. That gap, between when the call came in and when someone called the homeowner back, is the place where most service businesses leak money.

What the pattern actually looks like

Response-time decay in service businesses is dramatic. Anyone who's been answering inbound calls in a trade for any length of time knows the cliff is real. The conversion rate on a call returned at 5 minutes is meaningfully different from one returned at 5 hours, even though both of those still sound "fast" by most office-job standards.

For residential service, the curve is plausibly steeper than B2B sales. The reason is the call shape. A buyer doing B2B procurement is researching multiple vendors over a week. A homeowner with a leaking water heater is calling the next number on Google in 30 seconds. The "qualification window" is measured in minutes, not hours.

You don't need a research paper to know this. You need to look at your own callbacks. The cliff is in your phone log already, you just haven't graphed it yet.

What "response time" actually means

There's a tricky definitional issue worth flagging. "Response time" can mean two different things, and shops conflate them.

The first is time to first touch. The second is time to live conversation. Picking up the phone in 2 rings is one kind of response. Sending a text back inside 5 seconds is another. Returning a voicemail at 7:45am the next morning is a third. All three are "responding." They have wildly different conversion implications.

The version that matters most for conversion is time to live conversation: a real human or AI actually talking with the lead. That's the standard most B2B sales orgs benchmark against. The interesting question for service businesses is whether a 5-second automated text-back can stand in for a 10-minute live phone callback. The honest answer: sometimes yes, depending on what the caller wanted.

For most service callers, the answer is "Got your call. We can have someone there at 2pm. Reply YES to lock it in," delivered within seconds, is a better response than a live phone call returned 45 minutes later. The reason: the homeowner has already moved on from the original phone moment. The text catches her in the search-results scroll. The 45-minute callback catches her at the dinner table or already in someone else's truck.

What happens at common response-time intervals

The numbers below are illustrative based on the directional pattern. Use them as a rough mental model, not as a stat to quote.

Under 1 minute: best case. The caller still has your number open, their question fresh, their attention available. Conversion is high if the response is competent. This is the band where SMS-based text-back lives.

Related reading
  • Why customers hate voicemail (and what to leave instead)
  • What a missed service call actually costs your shop
  • The case for flat-rate pricing on call answering

Under 5 minutes: still strong. The caller has probably opened the next plumber's website but hasn't called yet. A live phone callback in this window often catches her before she dials the next number.

Under 30 minutes: the conversion rate has dropped meaningfully. The caller has likely called at least one other shop, maybe gotten a quote, maybe already booked. You're catching the ones who didn't get a satisfying answer from the others.

Under 1 hour: you're winning the leads where every other shop was even slower than you. The pool is small.

Over 24 hours: you're not really converting anymore. Most of those callbacks turn into "thanks, we found someone yesterday." Some rebook out of politeness, but the conversion rate is a fraction of what it was at minute 5.

The shape of this curve is more important than the exact percentages. The most important takeaway: most of the value is in the first hour, and most of the value within the first hour is in the first 5 minutes.

Why most shops don't hit it

Service businesses already know about response time intuitively. The reason they don't fix it isn't ignorance. It's that the structure of running the shop makes fast response hard.

The owner or dispatcher who'd respond to inbound is the same person doing 12 other things during business hours. After 5pm and on weekends, there's nobody at a phone at all. The mismatch between when calls come in and when someone could answer them is what generates the response-time gap.

The solutions people try fall into a few buckets. Hiring more office staff. Using an answering service. Setting up a callback queue. Layering on AI. Each one has different trade-offs, and the right answer depends on the shop's call volume against what the owner is willing to spend.

A 5-minute rule that actually holds

The cheapest target a small shop can hold is "every missed call gets a text reply within 5 minutes." Five minutes is short enough to catch most callers before they call the next plumber. It's slow enough that you can hit it without staffing a dispatcher at 11pm. Whatever tool you use to hit it, that's the operational bar.

The Avidra-specific version

Depending on how the shop has Avidra configured, the response time is measured in seconds, not minutes. The default for missed-call recovery is a text-back from the caller's perspective, sent inside the time it takes the homeowner to put the phone down. The voice-AI configuration responds even faster: the AI answers the call directly, no missed-call window at all.

The pricing page anchors what this costs against a single recovered job. At the Starter tier ($19/month), one $250 job covers about 15 months of subscription. At the Pro tier ($49/month), one job covers about 6 months. The math against response-time-driven conversion gains usually works out in 1-2 months of normal call volume, not 6.

What to measure in your own shop

If you want to know whether response time is your problem, the cheap test is this. Pick a normal week. For every inbound call you miss, write down two timestamps: when the call came in and when you (or whoever's on the rotation) called back. Then write down whether the lead converted.

The pattern almost always looks like a steep cliff. Callbacks under 5 minutes convert at one rate. Callbacks at an hour convert at a small fraction of that. Callbacks the next morning convert at a tiny fraction. Once you've seen the cliff in your own data, the decision about what to do about it makes itself.

The honest version of the decision: if your conversion cliff is steep AND your volume is high enough that the lost-conversion dollars outweigh the cost of any fix, you fix it. If your volume is low or your cliff is gentle (which happens in shops with mostly-referral business), you might be fine as you are.

You can read more about why voicemail makes the cliff worse, or jump straight to pricing for the math. Either way, measure your own cliff before you decide.