Agency Compare
Before you buy more leads, recover the demand you already paid for.
Home service agencies can create calls, clicks, forms, and booked jobs. Revenue Watchdog inspects whether the business actually monetized the demand after it entered the operation.
The executive test
Before approving the next budget increase, ask how much revenue leaked last week from leads, calls, estimates, agreements, cancellations, and maintenance visits you already paid to create.
If that answer is not available in one weekly proof view, the problem is not the tool. It is ownership.
What the incumbent sells
Generate more demand through SEO, PPC, local ads, websites, landing pages, call tracking, and lead reporting.
What Revenue Watchdog owns
Do not fire the agency because a leak exists. Inspect the paid demand first. If calls, estimates, service agreements, cancellations, maintenance, and old leads are leaking, more ad spend compounds the problem.
Four-question standard
Where are we losing money? How much is it worth? Who owns fixing it? How do we know it is fixed?
Leakage Still Happens
The question is not whether the current solution is useful. The question is whether it prevents these leaks.
Paid leads not reached
This leak only counts when a source record, dollar logic, recovery owner, status, and proof field are documented.
Booked calls not sold
This leak only counts when a source record, dollar logic, recovery owner, status, and proof field are documented.
Estimates not followed up
This leak only counts when a source record, dollar logic, recovery owner, status, and proof field are documented.
Agreements not offered
This leak only counts when a source record, dollar logic, recovery owner, status, and proof field are documented.
Canceled jobs not recovered
This leak only counts when a source record, dollar logic, recovery owner, status, and proof field are documented.
Old leads ignored
This leak only counts when a source record, dollar logic, recovery owner, status, and proof field are documented.
Proof Gap
Useful systems still leave executive proof gaps.
Revenue Watchdog does not attack the incumbent. It forces the incumbent data to meet a higher executive standard.
Attribution shows source, not recovered revenue.
Cost-per-lead reporting does not prove lead-to-revenue control.
Call counts hide what happened after the phone was answered.
Campaign dashboards rarely assign recovery ownership to managers.
Sales Objections
Common objections should become qualification tests.
Buyer says
Our agency already reports calls, leads, and booked jobs.
Revenue Watchdog answer
That may prove demand was created. It does not prove the operation fully converted and recovered the demand.
Buyer says
We need more lead volume.
Revenue Watchdog answer
Maybe. First inspect whether existing volume is leaking through missed calls, stale estimates, canceled jobs, and old leads.
Buyer says
Marketing owns this.
Revenue Watchdog answer
Marketing owns demand creation. Leadership owns whether paid demand turns into revenue after it enters the business.
Next Step
If the revenue is already leaking, the first meeting should find the economic threshold.
The call is not a software demo, agency pitch, or coaching session. It decides whether the existing data can support a paid Revenue Recovery Installation.
