Your numbers
Tell us about your business.
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Speed-to-lead — the CSR sets appointments too
Buy leads from Angi, HomeAdvisor or Fixr? The CSR contacts each one in seconds and works it to a booked visit. A lead is 21× more likely to qualify when reached in 5 minutes vs 30 (MIT, 2007) — yet the average rep makes just ~2 attempts and 23% of leads never get a call back (HBR, 2011). The CSR never tires and never forgets.
What each agent brings back
The breakdown
Where the money goes.
Lost appointments per month
80 appts × 70% no-sale rate
56
Revenue walking out (annual)
What 'no decision' actually costs you today
$8.06M
What your agents bring back
① CSR · sets — purchased leads → booked visits
20 visits set/mo · net of $3,750/mo lead spend
$819K / yr
① CSR · saves — no-shows confirmed & rebooked
7 rescued no-shows/mo, closed at 30%
$285K / yr
② Hero — lost deals rehashed
4 no-decision appts/mo brought back
$645K / yr
③ Multiplier — referrals, reviews, cross-sell
+8% on 28 closed deals/mo
$328K / yr
Total value / year
Appointments set, confirmed, recovered + grown
$2.08M
New effective close rate
Up from 30% — a 5.6-point lift from CSR + Hero, no new leads
35.6%
Estimates assume steady-state operation after 60 days of RehashHero working your pipeline. Your actual mileage depends on industry, lead source, and how stale your backlog is — but stale leads are often the highest ROI. The breakdown assumes the CSR sets the share of purchased leads you enter (net of lead spend) and holds no-shows near 15%, the Hero closes the recovery rate you set, and the Multiplier's uplift bundles referrals, reviews, and cross-sell (review reputation value isn't dollarized here — it's upside). Speed-to-lead figures: MIT/InsideSales (2007) and HBR (2011). All defaults are conservative industry midpoints.