Your happiest customers are the quietest ones.
The job went perfectly. The customer said "you’re a lifesaver" at the door. You meant to ask for a review, then the next job started, and the moment passed. The customers most likely to praise you publicly are asked least, because asking is one more task at the end of a long day. This automation asks every time, at the exact moment they are happiest.
$800 setup
then $149/month
Book your 15-minute callThe 48-hour clock starts when your 15-minute onboarding call ends.
How a run flows
Every run takes the same path: checked before anything sends, held when a rule says hold, and logged at the end.
Trigger
A job is completed, or an invoice is paid. You choose the trigger.
Check
One invitation per customer. Duplicate triggers collapse into a single ask.
Action
The review invitation goes out while the work is fresh.
Logged
The run is logged, with a copy in your inbox.
One real run
Thursday, 3:20pm
The final invoice is paid (or the job is marked done, your choice). That is the trigger.
Friday, 8:30am
A short thank-you goes out in your words, with one direct link to your Google review page. One tap on their phone and they are writing.
Friday, 8:47am
Five stars, two sentences, public.
The other path
A week of quiet earns one gentle second note, then the ask closes. Two touches, done.
Month end
Your numbers email counts asks sent, reviews received and your running total.
How set-up goes
One 15-minute call: we set your thank-you wording, pick your trigger and grab your Google review link (we find it for you). One consent click for your email account. Live inside 48 hours from the end of the call, or setup is free.
You provide: your email account and your Google review link. We find the link for you on the call.
The time it returns
A typical example with conservative arithmetic. Write in your own numbers.
| Task it removes | Each time | Cadence | A year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asking for a review after a job | 3 min | 8 per week | ~21 hours |
| Following up the ask | 2 min | 4 per week | ~7 hours |
| Total | ~28 hours | ||
About $1,960 of your time at $70 an hour. The compounding part sits outside the table: every review is a permanent public asset that keeps selling for you, and consistency is what builds the pile.
The price, in full
$800 setup
then $149/month
The monthly covers hosting and monitoring, the run log, wording changes anytime, the monthly numbers email, and support from the people who built it.
Live in 48 hours, or setup is free.
The 48-hour clock starts when your 15-minute onboarding call ends. Monthly billing starts on go-live day.
Book your 15-minute callAdd a second automation and save 10% on the monthly. Three or more saves 20%.
Questions, answered
Which platforms?
Google by default, because that is where local customers look. Other platforms are configurable on the call.
How does it know a job is finished?
You choose the trigger on the call: final invoice paid in your accounting software (Xero, MYOB and QuickBooks all work), or job marked done. Paid-invoice is the popular choice, since a paid customer is a settled one.
What if a job went sideways?
You can hold any single ask with one click. The automation asks the customers you would ask yourself, just reliably.
Is automated asking allowed?
Yes. The ask is honest, incentive-free and consistent for every customer, which sits comfortably inside Google’s review policies. Filtering who gets asked by predicted rating is the practice Google prohibits, and this automation does the opposite: it asks evenly.
What if someone leaves a hard review?
You hear about every new review quickly, which is the real advantage: a prompt, gracious reply to a hard review often reads better to future customers than the review itself.
Your next happy customer is one tap from saying so publicly.
Book your 15-minute call$800 setup, $149 a month. The 48-hour clock starts when your 15-minute onboarding call ends.