The Problem
A customer just handed over $800 for an emergency AC repair. They're relieved it's fixed, annoyed it happened, and painfully aware of how much unexpected breakdowns cost. This is the best moment you'll ever get to offer a maintenance agreement. The repair is fresh. The invoice stings. The maths on prevention practically sells itself.
Most trades businesses never make the offer. Or they make it weeks later in a generic email blast, long after the urgency has faded. The numbers tell the story: companies with structured upselling programs see 30% to 50% higher revenue per customer compared to passive order taking. Trades businesses that do present maintenance plans at the right moment report 15% to 25% conversion rates. But "the right moment" is the catch. Two hours after a $500+ repair outperforms next day outreach by two to three times.
Acquiring a new customer costs five to seven times more than keeping an existing one. A maintenance plan locks in retention and generates $2 in additional pull through work for every $1 of plan value. HVAC companies with 40% or more of revenue coming from recurring agreements sell at two to three times the multiple of demand call dependent businesses. Recurring service agreements already account for 55% of all HVAC services revenue, growing at 8.3% annually.
The gap isn't awareness. Most owners know they should sell more plans. The gap is execution. Remembering to follow up, personalising each message, hitting the right timing window, and doing it consistently across every qualifying job. That's not a discipline problem. It's a systems problem.
How It Works
Here's the automation, step by step. Once configured, it runs without anyone on your team lifting a finger.
1. Job completion triggers the workflow
When a technician marks a job complete in your field service management software (such as ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, or Jobber), the system checks the invoice total against your configured threshold. If it's above your chosen amount (say $500), the workflow fires. Jobs below the threshold are ignored entirely.
2. Two hour delay
The automation waits two hours. Not immediately (that feels pushy while they're still processing the bill) and not the next day (the urgency fades overnight). Two hours is the sweet spot: the customer has had time to breathe, but the repair is still top of mind.
3. Personalised message sent
The system pulls the customer's name, equipment details, and repair description from the job record. It then sends a personalised email or SMS (or both) that references their specific repair, explains how a maintenance plan would have caught the issue earlier, and includes a direct sign up link. A message that says "Your 8 year old Carrier unit just needed a $650 capacitor replacement" converts at twice the rate of a generic "consider a maintenance plan" pitch.
4. Sign up form is prefilled
The link takes the customer to a sign up page (built with something like Typeform, Tally, or your own landing page) where their details are already populated. Name, address, equipment, recommended plan tier. All they need to do is confirm and enter payment details. Reducing friction at this stage matters more than you'd think.
5. Follow up for non responders
If the customer doesn't click through within five days, a second message goes out with a different angle. This one focuses on cost savings: "Over the next five years, maintenance costs $1,000 total. Without it, you're looking at two to three emergency repairs at $500 to $800 each." Different framing catches the people who weren't moved by the first message.
6. Conversion logged and team notified
When a customer signs up, their new agreement is recorded in your CRM or field service platform, recurring billing is set up through Stripe or your payment processor, and your team gets a notification. No manual data entry, no forgotten sign ups sitting in an inbox.
Why Timing Changes Everything
You could hand every technician a script to pitch maintenance plans on site. Some companies do. The conversion rates are mediocre, and the approach burns goodwill. Your tech just fixed something. The customer is paying. That's not the moment to upsell them.
Two hours later is different. The stress has settled. They've told their partner about the $800 bill. They're thinking about whether it'll happen again. And then a message arrives that doesn't feel like a sales pitch. It feels like a practical suggestion from someone who just fixed their problem.
Your emergency repair cost $800. A maintenance plan costs $200 a year. Over five years, the plan costs $1,000 total. Without it, you'll likely face two to three emergency repairs at $500 to $800 each. The plan pays for itself by year two.
That's maths, not marketing. When the customer reads it two hours after paying the bill, the conversion is almost automatic. Personalised messages referencing specific equipment and repair history convert at double the rate of generic offers. And the two hour window outperforms next day by two to three times. Combine both factors and the conversion rate is in a completely different league to anything manual outreach can deliver.
From One Off Repairs to Recurring Revenue
The real value isn't the plan fee itself. A $200 per year maintenance agreement is nice, but it's what comes after that matters. Maintenance customers stay longer. They call you first for new work. They refer neighbours. And for every dollar of maintenance contract value, you generate an additional $2 in pull through work: upgrades, replacements, add on services that come from being the trusted provider who shows up twice a year.
There's a reason acquirers pay premium multiples for trades businesses with strong recurring revenue. A company generating 40% or more of revenue from maintenance plans sells at two to three times revenue. A demand call dependent business? Half that, if you're lucky. Every maintenance plan you convert is an investment in the long term valuation of your business, not just next month's cash flow.
And the automation keeps compounding. Last month you completed 40 repair jobs over $500. If 15% converted to maintenance plans at $200 per year, that's $1,200 in new recurring revenue from a single month's work. Over 12 months, that compounds to $14,400 in annual recurring revenue. Without anyone on your team sending a single manual message.
The Business Impact
Take a mid sized plumbing and HVAC business running 50 repair jobs per week. Roughly 30% of those (15 jobs) come in above $500. With a 15% conversion rate on maintenance plan offers, that's just over two new plan sign ups per week. At $250 per year per plan, that's $500 in new annual recurring revenue each week.
Over a year, that adds up to 115 new maintenance plans generating $28,750 in direct plan revenue. Factor in the $2 of pull through work per $1 of plan value, and you're looking at $86,250 in total additional revenue from those converted customers. The cost? A Zapier plan, an SMS service, and about four hours of initial setup. The ROI isn't close.
- 15% to 25% conversion rate on post repair maintenance plan offers, compared to under 5% with unstructured manual approaches
- Two to three times higher conversion from the two hour timing window versus next day outreach
- $2 in additional pull through work generated for every $1 of maintenance plan value
- Zero manual effort per offer. Every qualifying job triggers an outreach automatically
- Higher business valuation: recurring revenue businesses sell at two to three times the multiple of demand call dependent competitors
Frequently Asked Questions
We already offer maintenance plans. How is this different?
Offering plans and systematically presenting them with perfect timing and personalisation are completely different things. If you don't know your repair to plan conversion rate, it's probably under 5%. This automation ensures every qualifying customer gets a personalised offer at the exact right moment, every single time. No relying on techs to remember, no generic email blasts weeks later.
Won't customers find a text two hours after paying annoying?
A generic "buy our plan" message would be annoying. A personalised message that says "A $19 per month plan would have caught that $800 issue before it failed" isn't spam. It's useful information delivered at the moment the customer is most receptive to hearing it. The 15% to 25% conversion rates speak for themselves.
What field service management platforms does this work with?
Any platform that can trigger a webhook or connect to Zapier when a job is marked complete. That includes ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, Jobber, ServiceM8, and most modern field service tools. If your software has an API or a Zapier integration, this workflow plugs in.
Can we customise the dollar threshold and timing?
Yes. The threshold, delay period, message content, and follow up sequence are all configurable. Some businesses set it at $300, others at $750. Some prefer a three hour delay. You test what works for your customer base and adjust.
Do we need SMS opt in from the customer?
For marketing messages via SMS, yes. Australian spam laws require consent. The simplest approach is adding an opt in checkbox to your job completion paperwork or digital invoice. Email is less restricted but still needs a valid unsubscribe option. Your automation platform handles the compliance mechanics.
What if the repair type doesn't suit a maintenance plan?
The workflow can filter by job type or category. One off installations, warranty work, or job types you flag as non recurring simply skip the trigger. You only send offers where a maintenance plan genuinely makes sense for the customer.
How long does this take to set up?
Most businesses are live within a day. The workflow itself takes three to four hours to configure, including message templates, sign up form, and payment integration. If you want help mapping it to your specific tools and customer journey, book your free audit and we'll walk through it together.
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