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Roofers

What a missed call really costs your roofing business

Every roofing lead costs you money, and you are on a roof when the phone rings. Here is what each missed call adds up to, and how to stop sending paid leads to voicemail.

Matt Horner Matt Horner Co-Founder 5 min read
A roofer working on a residential roof while their phone rings unanswered beside their tool bag.

A roofing lead in Canada costs roughly C$45 to C$65, whether you buy it or earn it through Google Ads. So a missed call is not just a lost job. It is money you already spent to make the phone ring, sent straight to voicemail while you were up on a roof. The leak is real, and you can put a number on it.

What a roofing lead is actually worth

Before you can see the cost of a missed call, you need to know what a lead is worth. And roofing leads are not cheap.

Buy them from a pay-per-lead site and you are paying dollars per call, often shared with two or three other contractors. Generate them yourself through Google Ads and the cost per click on roofing terms runs high, easily into the tens of dollars a click. Either way, you are looking at something like C$45 to C$65 to make one phone ring.

Here is the part that stings: that money is spent the moment the phone rings, not the moment you answer. So if you let it ring out, you have already paid full price for a lead and gotten nothing back.

Why roofers miss more calls than most trades

Roofers do not miss calls because they are careless. They miss them because of where the job happens.

  • You cannot answer a phone with both hands on a shingle and a nail gun in reach.
  • You are up on scaffolding or a ladder, and stopping to dig out a phone is not safe.
  • You are driving between job sites or the supply yard, and there is often no signal on the roof itself.
  • When a storm rolls through, ten people call in the same hour and one phone cannot take them all.

Most trades can at least step aside to take a call. A roofer physically cannot, for hours at a stretch. That is exactly why the missed-call problem is worse in roofing than almost anywhere else.

The math: what one missed call costs

Let's run the number the lead sites never put in front of you. Say you have paid around C$55 for a lead, and the job behind it, a repair or a section of new roof, is worth somewhere around C$1,400 once you factor in a typical day rate of C$350 to C$500 plus materials.

  1. You spent about C$55 to make that phone ring.
  2. The call comes in while you are on a roof, and it goes to voicemail.
  3. The homeowner does not wait. They tap the next contractor on Google and book them.
  4. You have now lost the C$55 of spend and the C$1,400 job behind it.
  5. Multiply by three or four missed calls a week and that is roughly C$4,200 to C$5,600 of work gone, every week, on top of the lead spend you keep paying.

Even if only half of those callers would ever have booked, the number is rough. You are not losing the price of the lead. You are losing the job, and often the repeat work and word-of-mouth that came with it.

Missed calls after hours and on weekends

A lot of roofing work is not planned. A shingle tears off in a windstorm, a flat roof starts leaking overnight, ice damming forces water under the membrane in a freeze. Those calls land in the evening, on the weekend, in the middle of the night.

That is precisely when there is no chance of you answering, and precisely when the caller is most desperate to reach someone. An after-hours answering service catches those emergency calls instead of dumping them into a voicemail box nobody checks until Monday, by which point the roof has been fixed by someone else.

What it costs to fix it versus what it costs to ignore it

Put the two numbers side by side. On one side, the cost of making sure every call gets answered. On the other, the cost of the jobs you lose by not answering. For most roofing businesses that is not a close contest.

Voicemail Call back later Hire a receptionist Hey Jodie
Answers every call Sort of No Business hours only Yes, 24/7
Catches storm and after-hours jobs Rarely No No Yes
Captures the job details Rarely If they answer Yes Yes
Monthly cost Free Free A full salary Low
Caller reaches a real conversation No No Yes Yes

Voicemail feels free, but it loses you paid-for leads, so it is the most expensive option on the list. A receptionist answers beautifully and then clocks off at five, missing every storm call. The gap, every call answered without a full-time wage, is exactly where an AI answering service sits.

Speed to lead: the contractor who answers first wins

There is one rule under all of this. The roofer who answers first wins the job. Not the best one, not the cheapest one, the first one to pick up.

That is true of every lead channel: you can pour money into ads, directories and reviews, but if the call rings out, you have funded a job for a competitor. Generating the lead is the expensive half. Capturing it is the cheap half, and the half most roofers skip because they are, quite literally, on a roof.

Work out your own number this week: your average job value, times the new-customer calls you figure you miss. Whatever falls out the bottom is roughly what answering every call is worth to you. If you want to see how that works for a roofing business, start with our overview of call answering for roofing contractors.

Part of our guides for Roofers See how Hey Jodie helps roofers answer every call.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a roofing lead cost?
A roofing lead in Canada typically runs between C$45 and C$65, whether you buy it from a pay-per-lead site or generate it through Google Ads. That is what you spend just to make the phone ring. If the call then goes to voicemail, the money is gone and the job goes to whoever picked up.
How do you get roofing leads without paying?
The cheapest leads come from a Google Business Profile, genuine reviews, repeat customers and referrals. They cost time rather than money. The free advantage almost nobody uses is simply answering faster than the next contractor, because the homeowner books the first person who actually picks up.
How much do roofers charge per day in Canada?
A working roofer day rate is commonly around C$350 to C$500, and a full job runs to several hundred dollars or into the thousands. That is the figure sitting behind every call, which is why a single missed one is worth far more than the lead you paid for.
Is an answering service worth it for a roofing business?
If you miss even a couple of new-customer calls a week, the lost jobs dwarf the cost of cover. An answering service pays for itself the moment it saves one job you would otherwise have sent to a competitor by letting it ring out.

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