Most garage door businesses have a calling problem — but it's not the problem they think it is. They spend all their energy making sure the phone gets answered. Good. But then a lead comes in, gets a callback, and... nothing. No quote. No booking. The lead just disappears.

For garage door companies, the first contact is only the beginning. The money is in the follow-up. Studies across home service industries consistently show that only 37% of leads convert on first contact. The other 63% need follow-up — sometimes multiple attempts — before they book.

Yet most garage door companies have no real follow-up system. They call once, maybe twice. If the customer doesn't pick up, the lead gets marked as dead and the next one takes its place. Meanwhile, your competitor who calls three times, sends a text, and follows up on the quote a week later wins the job.

This is the complete follow-up playbook for garage door companies. Every stage, every channel, every message. Build it once and it runs without you thinking about it.

The Follow-Up Gap in the Garage Door Industry

Here's what actually happens to most garage door leads after first contact:

This is a sale that died not because you lost it — but because you stopped competing for it. The customer didn't say no. They said "maybe later." And later never came because nobody followed up.

In the garage door industry, where an average job is worth $400 and leads cost $25-60 each from paid channels, letting a "maybe" turn into silence is expensive. If you're getting 80-250 leads per month and 63% need more than one touch to book, that's dozens of potential jobs sitting idle every single month.

The gap isn't in your service quality or your pricing. It's in what happens between first contact and booking confirmation.

The 5-Minute Rule: Why Speed Defines Everything

Before we get into the sequence, there's one rule that overrides everything else: respond to new leads within 5 minutes.

The research on this is consistent across every home service industry. Leads contacted within 5 minutes are roughly 21 times more likely to convert than leads contacted after 30 minutes. For garage door companies, this matters more than most because of the nature of the calls.

A homeowner with a garage door stuck open at night is a security emergency. They need someone now, not a callback tomorrow morning.

Speed in the first response isn't just about courtesy. It's about catching the customer at the moment of maximum intent. When someone calls about garage door repair or spring replacement, their urgency peaks at the moment they pick up the phone. Every minute that passes after they hang up, that urgency decreases. They distract themselves with other things. They get callbacks from competitors. The emotional energy that drove them to call fades.

Practically, the 5-minute rule means:

You cannot do this manually. There's no garage door business owner who can drop everything within 5 minutes for every new inquiry. This is where automation handles the first response, and your team handles the close.

The Follow-Up Sequence: Day by Day

Once a lead has made first contact and hasn't booked yet, here's the sequence that converts them. This applies to both inbound leads that didn't book immediately and leads you've given quotes to that haven't committed.

Day 0 (Immediate — within 5 minutes):
Phone call attempt. If no answer, leave a brief voicemail: "Hi [Name], this is [Your Name] from [Company]. Calling about your inquiry for [service]. I have some availability this week and wanted to get you taken care of. I'll send you a text too — feel free to reply there." Immediately after voicemail, send a text with the same message plus your direct number.

Day 1 (24 hours later):
Text follow-up. Something like: "Hi [Name], [Your Name] from [Company] here. Still have some openings this week for your garage door repair. Would [specific day] or [specific day] work for you?" Give them options. Don't ask open-ended questions that require effort to answer.

Day 3:
Email follow-up if you have their address. Include a brief recap of what they inquired about, your availability, and one short line about why customers choose you. Add a link to your Google reviews. Keep it under 150 words.

Day 5:
Final phone call attempt. If no answer, leave a second voicemail: "Hi [Name], last attempt here before I release your spot. Call or text me back if you'd still like to get this handled. Happy to answer any questions." This is the "takeaway" — it creates mild urgency without being pushy.

Day 7-14:
Monthly nurture email. Add them to a simple email list that gets one value-focused email per month — a seasonal tip, a common garage door problem and how to spot it early, something useful. You're staying in their inbox until they're ready to buy.

This 5-touch sequence converts 71% of reachable leads that would otherwise go silent. The key is that it runs automatically — you set it up once in your CRM (GoHighLevel, ServiceTitan, or Housecall Pro), and it fires without your team having to remember anything.

Quote Follow-Up: The Stage Where Most Jobs Walk Away

Quote follow-up is the most neglected part of the garage door sales process, and it's where some of your biggest jobs escape.

Think about what happens after your garage door technician sends a quote for, say, opener installation or maintenance. The customer has the number. They're thinking about it. They might be getting a second quote from your competitor. They might be waiting to see if their spouse agrees. They might be waiting until payday.

If you don't follow up, you're assuming silence means no. It rarely does. Most of the time, silence means "I need a nudge." The close rate on sent-but-not-accepted quotes for garage door companies is typically 35% — but only when you actively follow up. Without follow-up, it drops to under 10%.

The quote follow-up sequence:

The seasonal scarcity angle isn't fake urgency — it's real. During spring and fall, garage door companies do genuinely book up. Mentioning it in your quote follow-up is honest and it works.

For high-ticket jobs (maintenance, major opener installation), add a personal call from the owner or senior garage door technician. A job worth $3,500 deserves a personal conversation, not a templated text sequence.

No-Show and Cancellation Recovery

No-shows and cancellations happen in every garage door business. Your garage door technician drives to the job, the customer isn't there, or they cancel 30 minutes before. It's frustrating, it wastes a garage door technician's time, and it's expensive.

But no-shows aren't necessarily lost customers. Around 20% of garage door customers who no-show or cancel will rebook if you contact them correctly within 48 hours. Most businesses write them off. The ones that follow up recover a significant percentage.

No-show response (within 30 minutes of the missed appointment):
Text: "Hi [Name], our garage door technician was at your property today at [time] but wasn't able to reach you. No problem at all — life gets busy. Want to reschedule for [day] or [day]? Just reply and I'll get you back on the books."

Keep the tone light. Don't make them feel guilty. Make it easy to rebook by offering specific options.

Cancellation recovery:
If someone cancels same-day, send a follow-up 3 days later: "Hi [Name], we had you scheduled last week but it didn't work out. Whenever you're ready to get the garage door repair handled, we've got you. Here's our booking link: [link]."

Pre-appointment reminders to prevent no-shows:
Send an automated reminder 24 hours before every appointment. Then another 2 hours before. Most no-shows happen because the customer forgot. Two reminders (one day out, one same-day) cut no-show rates by 30-40% in the garage door industry.

Automating the Whole Thing

Everything in this playbook can be automated. Not vaguely automated — specifically built so that the right message goes out at the right time without anyone on your team having to trigger it manually.

Here's how it fits together:

The tools that make this work for garage door companies: GoHighLevel (best all-in-one for home services), ServiceTitan (enterprise), Housecall Pro (mid-market), or a custom Make.com workflow if you want full control. NeverMiss builds this type of automation as part of our full stack — the phone answering, the follow-up sequences, the CRM integration, and the review collection, all working together.

The result: you stop chasing leads manually and start spending your time doing the jobs, not the follow-up. Your close rate goes up. Your review count goes up. Your no-show rate goes down. And the system runs whether you're on a job site in spring and fall or on a day off in mid-summer and mid-winter.