Operations & automationThe Lowcountry to Myrtle Beach and beyond

Plumbing.You’re a plumber, not a paper-pusher. The invoices shouldn’t wait for Sunday night.

Summer on the coast means the phone rings all day — service calls, rental turnovers, water heaters that picked July to quit — and a share of those calls ring out to the guy down the road while your dispatcher rebuilds the morning. Meanwhile the money sits in the truck and the maintenance agreements quietly lapse. I build systems that carry the office side, so the wrench work is the whole job.

The proof, live

You will see what it saves.

Every client gets a private portal: what ran, what it saved, and the math behind the number. You will never wonder what you’re paying for. And when something breaks — things break — you see it caught and fixed, not silence.

The dashboard here is sample data. Yours shows your numbers, counted conservatively, with the arithmetic visible.

Everything’s running normally.Sample data
11.8 hrsreclaimed this month — the math behind it, one click away
~132 hrs · ~$5,900 since we started, counted conservatively
Job close → same-day invoice8 sent today · extras captured at the truck
Agreement renewals & card checks12 due · 2 expired cards caught
Review request after job close6 asked · 2 new five-stars
Caught & fixed
Jul 9Caught a finished job that never became an invoice; billed it same day.
Jun 21Flagged an expired card before the maintenance plan quietly lapsed.
In progressMissed-call text-back, so voicemail stops losing jobs
What eats the week

Sound familiar?

01
The schedule blows up by 8 a.m.
One emergency call and the dispatcher spends the morning on the phone rebuilding the whole board — while new calls ring out and land with whoever answers first.
Common
02
Money sits in the truck.
The job wraps Monday, the paperwork rides around all week, and the invoice goes out Sunday night — then you’re chasing the check. Work you already did, cash you’re still waiting on.
Common
03
A shoebox of signed maintenance agreements, and no idea whose card just bounced.
The steadiest revenue you have: inspections nobody books, renewals nobody tracks, cards that quietly expired. It cancels itself while everyone’s under a house.
Common
04
Your reviews are stale, and the competition’s aren’t.
Every happy customer is a five-star review you never asked for, because asking is one more manual step at the end of a long day.
Common
“He gave me my Tuesday mornings back.”
— Nobody yet. This space is reserved for my first plumbing clients, and I intend to earn it.
How it works

Four steps. Clear terms.

  1. A free conversation. Phone or in person. If I’m not the right fit, I’ll say so and point you to someone better suited.
  2. A paid assessment. I map how your operation actually runs and write down exactly where the time goes. The document is yours to keep either way.
  3. A fixed-price proposal. Defined scope, one price, no hourly meter running.
  4. The build, and after. Built once, to fit your operation exactly. Monitored after hand-off, with a monthly plain-language report of what ran and what it saved. Automations nobody watches break silently; mine don’t.

The longer version, and the work behind it, is on the home page.

Let’s talk

A first conversation,
at no charge.

If something on this page sounded familiar, the next step is a conversation. Write a few sentences about what is going on. I’ll read it before we talk.

By phone
Leave a message and I’ll return your call within a reasonable time — sometimes right away, sometimes a few hours, sometimes the next business day.
By email
Replies within two business days.
Based in
Myrtle Beach, SC
Serving the Lowcountry to Myrtle Beach and beyond — and clients across the country.