The promise
If Avidra doesn't recover 3 booked jobs in your first 30 days, I refund everything and disconnect you myself.
No forms. No retention call.
Asad
HVAC · LONGUEUIL
Maintenance season hit hard this year and you're booked three weeks out. The calls keep coming. Most of them are first-time customers and most of them don't wait three weeks.
You're on a rooftop unit with the micron gauge open and the phone is in the truck below.
Avidra is a text-back system that runs the second you miss a call. The caller gets a real reply, not a voicemail loop. You get a structured lead with the basics filled in.
The text doesn't replace the human conversation. It buys time for it. You still call back. You still close the job. Avidra just makes sure the lead is warm and the basics about the homeowners are in your inbox before you do.
Step 1 · Missed call detected
A missed call to your business number lights up Avidra automatically. The first SMS fires before the caller has put their phone down.
Step 2 · SMS qualifier
The text introduces itself as your office, says you'll be in touch, and asks for the basics: name, address, what's going on, when they need someone there.
Step 3 · Job summary to your phone
The qualifying answers land in your inbox as a clean lead summary. No app to open. No dashboard to check.
Step 4 · You decide when to call back
The caller stays in the loop while you finish your current job. A polite reminder fires if too much time passes.
You decide who picks up first. Run the human-first mode: your phone rings, and Avidra only steps in if the call goes unanswered. Or run the AI-first mode: Avidra picks up live and transfers when the caller wants a human. Most shops start human-first because the customer relationship still flows through you. AI-first makes sense once the volume is past what one person can handle.
The Free tier includes both AI voice answering and SMS text-back, so the pickup-mode choice doesn't cost extra.
Avidra answers calls live with AI voice, or texts missed callers back if you'd rather. It runs your intake script. It captures jobs and relays messages to your customers when you ask. What it doesn't do: write your invoices, schedule your techs, replace your dispatcher, or pull customer history from your CRM.
The script will disclose your service-call fee if you tell it to, but it won't volunteer a price you haven't approved. It won't diagnose a no-cool by symptom. It won't tell a homeowner whether their compressor is shot. Equipment make and model gets captured. What you do with that information is your call.
The math on your missed calls
73% of homeowners don't leave a voicemail. They call the next HVAC contractor on Google.
Avidra catches them in 4.2 seconds.
The promise
No forms. No retention call.
Asad
Avidra isn't just for missed calls. The owner side runs on text and voice too. From a truck or a job site, you can text the Avidra number to relay a message to a specific customer, ask how today's leads are shaping up, or have the AI book a callback. It does what a human dispatcher would do, on whichever channel you're already using.
The calls that land most often go something like this. AC blowing warm air after the contactor stuck. Low refrigerant suspected after a long cooling run. Mini-split error code on the indoor head. Annual maintenance booking for spring or fall. Each is the same opportunity. The phone is the bottleneck.
After hours, the calls shift. The patience is shorter and the stakes are higher. No AC during a heat advisory. Gas smell near a furnace, needs immediate triage. Fast pickup is the difference between the job and a callback that never gets returned.
Two peaks. Heat advisories drive AC emergency calls May through August. Cold snaps and first-frost weeks drive no-heat calls late October through February.
Volume changes by season. Pickup rate shouldn't. Avidra fires the text-back the same way in February as it does in July, on a slow Tuesday or during a heat-advisory week.
Setup is a 10-digit phone number and a short script. You forward your missed calls to the Avidra number that gets assigned at signup. You edit the default intake script to match how you talk to a new lead. That's the whole setup.
Most owners run their first real test inside an hour of signing up. The honest test is to miss a call on purpose from a friend's phone and watch what happens. The text fires. The follow-up questions land. You see the lead summary on your phone.
Speed is the whole game. A caller who got voicemail and then got a confirmation email twenty minutes later has already booked the next number on the list. A text-back inside five seconds reads as a real reply. The caller responds while they're still mentally on the call. The human callback then lands into a warm conversation, not a cold one.
What about gas-smell calls, will it triage those?
Gas-smell calls trigger an immediate 'leave the house and call 911 first' message before the booking conversation continues.
Will it handle warranty questions?
It captures the warranty claim details and routes them to the office. Warranty answers come from your team, not the bot.
Does the script know the difference between cooling and heating season?
You can configure seasonal scripts. Most owners switch them in October and again in April.
Can it capture make and model of the equipment?
Yes. The script asks for the equipment make, model, and rough age. The answer is in the lead summary.
What if the caller is on a maintenance contract?
Recognized numbers route straight to your phone. The text only fires for cold calls.
Plug it in, miss a call, see what happens. 14 days free, no card needed to start. Same intake. Same lead summary. Longueuil or anywhere else we work.
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