Every service call, install, and warranty across the companies you acquired routes through you: which tech, which cert, which crew. Each runs on its own calendar and its own tribal knowledge. Miss a beat and a commercial client waits. Here's one emergency call, dispatched without you. Scroll through it.
A commercial property manager texts. No dispatcher is free. But this time it's captured, read, and understood the second it arrives.
Job type, priority, and the right acquired company's roster, sorted automatically. The judgment call you'd normally make by hand, already made.
It checks certifications and open slots across all the companies at once, picks the nearest qualified tech, and books the window. No phone tag, no calendar you have to hold in your head.
Tech name, arrival window, and a job number, sent the moment it's booked. The difference between the contractor who answers and the one who calls back tomorrow.
The tech's queue updates with the job, the address, and the access notes. He rolls up prepared, and you never touched a calendar, a phone, or a crew roster.
Lincoln Tower · 3rd-floor rooftop AC · 10:30 AM
Service elevator, badge at desk. Open work order ›
The operating layer you'd need a dispatcher in every acquired company to run, working across all of them at once.
A commercial unit down isn't a ticket. It's a property manager deciding whether you're the contractor who answers, or the one who calls back tomorrow.
If we're wrong, the conversation ends here. If we're close, dispatch is rarely the only thing running through one person's memory.
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.