What businesses actually did with Sarah on the line.
Real businesses, real numbers, real Saturday nights. Filter by industry or business size to find one that looks like yours.
How Henson Roofing booked $47,000 in storm jobs on one Saturday night.
After three years of voicemail-to-nowhere, Jake Henson signed up for Ansa on a Tuesday. By the next Saturday, when a derecho rolled across northeast Oklahoma, Sarah was the reason his crews were still tarping roofs at midnight.

How Foothills Pest turned a termite swarm into $93,000 in recurring plans.
Ray Castellano spent every spring watching swarm-week calls roll to voicemail while his eight techs were out treating. Sarah had been live three weeks when the first warm rain hit. By the end of the surge she'd booked the inspections, and locked the quarterly plans, that used to walk to the next firm in town.

How Carlucci Heating & Air took quote response time from 4 hours to 90 seconds.
When a furnace dies at 11 PM in a Boise cold snap, the homeowner calls until someone answers. For years that someone was Tom Carlucci's wife, at the dinner table. Then it was Sarah, and the $9,000 replacements stopped going to the next guy who picked up.

How Velez Plumbing cut after-hours voicemails to zero in two weeks.
Rosa Velez built a 14-truck business on word of mouth and a phone that rang at 2 AM. The problem was never the work. It was the Monday-morning pile of voicemails from people who'd already hired someone else.

How Hsu Family Dental booked the $10,000 new patient who called at 9 PM.
A new dental patient is worth eight to ten thousand dollars over their lifetime, and Dr. Emily Hsu was sending more than a third of them to a voicemail they'd never fill out. The front desk closed at five. The new patients called at nine.

How Ziegler & Cole signed the cases it used to lose to voicemail.
For years, the after-hours wreck calls went to a machine and the caller went to the next firm. Then a Friday-night pileup on the I-90/I-94 sent nine injured callers to a dark office. Sarah, live for two weeks, signed the consults nobody was there to take.

How Washington Park Animal Hospital booked 112 after-hours emergencies in one quarter.
When a dog eats something at midnight, the owner is panicking and the clock is the patient. Dr. Mitchell's clinic was sending a third of those calls to a voicemail nobody fills out, until Sarah started answering them like a vet tech who never goes home.

How Delgado & Sons booked 9 storm inspections in the 48 hours after the Plano hail.
Ruben Delgado spent the worst hailstorm in DFW history on a roof in his own neighborhood, watching restoration calls flood a phone he couldn't reach. Sarah had been live for three weeks. By the time the sky cleared she'd booked $702,000 in inspection pipeline off calls he never saw ring.

How Castillo Garage Doors booked 9 spring repairs before 8 AM on the coldest morning of the year.
For a decade Marco Castillo's office line went to voicemail every time the trucks were rolling. Then a January cold snap snapped half the torsion springs in Riverside in one week, and Sarah was the reason his phone stopped bleeding $1,200 a call.

How Hadley Solar booked 9 site surveys on the Saturday before the credit died.
Diego Hadley spent the final week of the 30% solar tax credit on a roof in Ahwatukee, watching form-fills pile up he couldn't answer. Sarah had been live for nine days. By Saturday night she'd booked $234,000 in survey pipeline off the calls he missed.

How Alamo Lock & Key booked 11 lockouts overnight during a January freeze.
For years Ray Alvarado let the 2 AM phone ring and chased the voicemails at dawn. Then a Texas cold snap sent frozen deadbolts and dead fobs through the lines all night, and Sarah, live for two weeks, booked every call he slept through.

How The Hartman Team booked 11 showings off one listing's open-house weekend.
Rachel Hartman put a $625,000 listing live on a Thursday. By Saturday's open house, more than fifty buyers had called, most while her nine agents were already mid-showing. Sarah had been live for two weeks. She answered every one of those calls in under a minute.

How Patel Electric got the techs off the phones and back on the tools.
Mike Patel's electricians were also his dispatchers, answering calls from the top of a ladder, in front of a live panel, with a customer waiting. Half the calls dropped anyway. Then Sarah took the phone, and six licensed electricians went back to being electricians.

How Marek Automotive stopped handing the no-starts to the business down the road.
Tomas Marek runs five bays with four techs and no front-desk help. For years the first hard freeze of November turned his Monday phones into a flood he couldn't answer from under a car. Sarah went live a week before the 2025 freeze, and caught every no-start he used to lose.

How a one-person storage facility stopped losing $2,183 tenants to a ringing phone.
Dana Knox runs Stowaway alone: desk, golf cart, and phone, all at once. About a third of her calls never got answered. Then Sarah went live, and the June rush became the first summer she didn't lose a single move-in to voicemail.
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