$2,500 investment → $127k recovered revenue in 90 days. They were losing 40% of leads to slow follow-up. We automated their system. Recovery jumped to 25% of lost leads. That's 15 additional deals in Q4 @ $22k average.
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40% of leads lost to slow follow-up is more common than most businesses admit. The money's usually already on the table - it just needs a system to catch it before it goes cold.
Your new leads do not care about you. You pay $5 to get a click and act shocked when 99% of them ghost you. You do not need more ad spend. You need a better follow up system.
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This is spot on. The follow-up window is brutally short - most leads decide within 48 hours whether you're worth remembering. A structured sequence keeps you in the frame without being pushy.
Pattern I keep seeing: small businesses don't need more leads. They need to stop losing the ones they already have. The #1 silent killer? No follow-up system after the initial quote. Even a simple automated text 3 days later recovers deals that would've ghosted.
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A 3-day follow-up text sounds almost too simple to work, but the data says otherwise. It's often the difference between 'they went with someone else' and 'glad you reminded me.'
5 repetitive tasks every small business should automate today: Invoice follow-ups, Lead capture, Appointment reminders, Social media posting, Client onboarding emails.
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Solid list. Invoice follow-ups and lead capture are the two that usually pay for themselves fastest. Everything else is downstream of those being reliable.
The best automation I ever built took 11 minutes. Invoice reminder. 3 nodes. Saves 4 hours every week. Nobody clapped. It just runs. Quietly. Every Tuesday at 9 AM.
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This is what good automation looks like. Small, boring, reliable. The ones nobody notices are usually the ones saving the most time.
The lead system fires at 8AM, 2PM, 8PM whether I'm at the desk or not. 164 bids sent from 5,292 leads in the database. Next build: automated follow-up on bid responses. First contact gets attention. The actual conversion happens in the second message.
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Smart insight - the second message is where conversion actually happens. First contact opens the door, follow-up closes it. Worth prioritising that build.
Problem #3: No nurture sequence. Most leads are 30-90 days from a decision. Without follow-up, they forget you in a week. Fix: 14-day automated email + SMS sequence running without you touching anything.
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The 30-90 day decision window is real, especially for services. A 14-day sequence is a good starting point - keeps momentum without overwhelming prospects who aren't ready yet.
If your lead strategy is 'they'll call when they're ready,' you're leaving it to chance. They won't remember you in a week. A nurture sequence isn't optional anymore.
Don't confuse automation for AI. The real first problem in most MSMEs is data in 4-5 places that don't talk to each other. High-ROI moves are simple integrations: payment reminders via SMS when invoice crosses 30 days. Almost no LLM involvement needed.
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Well said. The highest-ROI automations are usually the least glamorous. A payment reminder at 30 days doesn't need AI. It needs to exist.
Step 3: filter by repeatability. Automation only works on tasks that follow a pattern. 'Reply to emails' = too vague. 'Send invoice reminder 3 days before due date' = automatable. If you can't describe the exact steps, it's not ready yet.
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Good framing. Specificity is what makes automation actually work. 'Follow up with leads' fails. 'Send email 3 days after quote, text 5 days after that' succeeds.
Your competitors are already doing this. Are you? While you're manually sorting through leads, writing follow-up emails, and building reports from scratch - someone in your industry just automated all three before their morning coffee.
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The competitive gap isn't about working harder anymore. It's about having systems that work while you don't. Automated follow-up is table stakes at this point.