How booking actually works
When a caller agrees to schedule, your wingman doesn’t say “Someone will call you back to schedule” — it books the appointment right there on the call.
Your wingman:
- Asks the caller for their preferred day/time
- Checks your live calendar — accounting for existing jobs, travel time between addresses, buffer time, and your hours
- Offers 2–3 specific slots (“How does Wednesday at 9am or Thursday at 2pm sound?”)
- Confirms the selected slot
- Captures contact info (name, address, phone for confirmation)
- Books the appointment in your calendar
- Sends an SMS + email confirmation within seconds
- Sets up the reminder cadence
Time elapsed: about 90 seconds.
What you’d otherwise be doing
The traditional path: caller leaves voicemail → you listen between jobs → call back → play phone tag → finally agree on a time → write it on paper → forget to put it in your calendar → no-show because you forgot to remind them. Total time invested: 20–30 minutes per booking, with a 15–25% no-show rate.
The wingman path: 0 minutes invested per booking, sub-5% no-show rate.
Reminders that actually reduce no-shows
The 24-hour reminder is sent via SMS by default (highest open rate of any channel — typically 95%+ within 30 minutes). The 1-hour-before reminder is sent via SMS again with location/parking/prep instructions specific to the job type.
Customers who need to reschedule reply “reschedule” or “different time” and the wingman handles it via text without a phone call. The cancelled slot opens up automatically. Other waiting leads can be offered the slot.
Service-area awareness
If you cover three counties, the wingman knows. If a caller in a fourth county asks for a job, the wingman politely declines with a referral suggestion — “I’m sorry, we don’t service [County]. Would you like the name of someone reputable nearby?” — preserving your reputation rather than being booked into a job you’d lose money on.
Integrations
Your wingman writes directly to:
- Google Calendar
- Microsoft Outlook
- Apple iCloud Calendar
- Your built-in dashboard view (always on)
Calendar syncs are bidirectional — if you block Friday afternoon for a personal appointment in Google Calendar, the wingman won’t book over it.