Scooping is a route business: the money is not in one cleanup, it is in the same yards every week, all year. But route businesses have a phone problem. You are in a backyard with a rake and a bucket, the phone is in the truck, and the homeowner calling for a quote is three rings from trying the next service on Google. Quickwire texts them back in seconds, quotes the way you quote, and adds another stop to your route.
No contracts to sign today. See it work first.
Almost every waste removal operator works the route personally, which means business hours are spent gloved, in yards, away from the phone. Callers are price-shopping a service they consider interchangeable, so the first company to respond with a number usually wins, and the winner keeps that yard for years of weekly visits. Spring is the brutal part: the first warm week after the snow melts, every phone in the industry rings at once with cleanup requests, and every operator is too buried in yards to answer. The season that should build your route is the season you are least reachable.
You're mid-job, after hours, or already on the line. The call rings out like it always has.
The caller instantly gets a text in your voice, asks what they need, and keeps the conversation alive.
Quickwire books the appointment and pings you with the details. You never stopped working.
The first warm Saturday in March, 11am. You are ankle-deep in a winter's worth of backlog when a homeowner with two great danes calls for a spring cleanup quote. Missed. Her text lands seconds later: "Hi, this is ScoopSquad! Out on a route right now. How many dogs, and how big is the yard?" She answers "2 big dogs, quarter acre, it's bad." The thread quotes the initial cleanup, pitches the weekly plan, and books Tuesday. One missed call just became a year-round stop.
If your pricing runs on simple inputs, yes. Number of dogs, yard size, and how long since the last cleanup cover most quotes in this trade. The thread collects those, gives your standard rate or a range you approve, and flags oddball jobs for you to price personally.
By answering every call you physically cannot, in seconds, while you work the backlog. Spring callers get quoted and booked instead of lost, and each initial cleanup conversation includes the weekly-plan pitch. The busiest month becomes the month your route grows instead of your voicemail.
The templates are written with you, so the recurring pitch is baked into every quote conversation: cleanup price, then what weekly service costs and saves. Plenty of one-time callers say yes when the upgrade is offered every single time, which is exactly what a busy owner forgets to do.
Compare it to route math, not to a phone bill. A weekly yard is roughly a thousand dollars a year in recurring revenue, and it renews itself. If catching missed calls adds a handful of yards a year, the service is one of the cheaper route-builders you can buy.
No. Quickwire works with your existing business number. Customers just see texts coming from you.
Drop your info and we'll get right back to you with the same instant text-back your waste removal service's customers would get.
Text DEMO to the number below, or book a 15-minute call. No pitch. Just proof.