You're running three job sites and a punch list. A new caller hits voicemail. ClinchCall picks up instead — captures scope, budget, and timeline, and texts you before you've crossed the next item off the list.
Built for the realities of running a job: split between sites, no time for discovery calls, low-fit leads everywhere.
Reno, addition, kitchen, bath, new build — captured upfront with photos and rough plans. You skip the discovery call.
The AI politely captures budget range and timeline. You decide which $3K patch jobs to skip and which $80K renos to call back first.
Pre-approved appointment slots get offered, the caller picks one, it lands on your calendar. No callback tag, no scheduling ping-pong.
Don't take our word for it. Call our demo line — it's the same AI, same voice your callers will hear. Ask it about pricing, setup, or how it'd handle a typical contractor call.
The agent identifies itself as automated at the start of the call (legally required), but the natural pacing and intake are exactly what your callers will get.
The questions contractors ask before signing up.
The AI captures budget range and scope politely up front so you can sort the $3K patch jobs from the $80K renos before you spend a Saturday on a callback.
The AI redirects out-of-scope work without taking intake. If you only do residential and someone asks about commercial, it politely points them elsewhere rather than logging a useless lead.
Yes. Business plans connect to Google Calendar; Pro plans send a tap-to-add iCal as an SMS attachment. The caller picks a slot, you get the booking.
Yes — by law and by design. Every call opens with "I'm [name], an automated assistant. This call may be recorded." After that, most callers don't think about it; they just answer the questions.
"Ring me first" mode tries your phone for up to 20 seconds before routing to the AI. If you grab it, the AI never enters the picture.
No setup fees. No surprise bills. Cancel anytime.