Lockouts happen at the worst times: answer every one.
Someone locked out of a home, car, or business needs help now, and they call until someone picks up. Your AI receptionist picks up right away, captures the location, and dispatches the job before they reach the next locksmith.
An AI receptionist for locksmiths answers around the clock, captures the exact location and lockout type, and dispatches fast, and it catches the second and third emergency that land while you’re already on a job, the ones a one-van shop would otherwise lose.
What a missed call costs you.
- 01Lockouts are urgent; the first locksmith to answer has the best shot at the job.
- 02Calls come at all hours, especially nights and weekends.
- 03A locksmith is usually one person and one van, so when two emergencies land at once, the one you can’t pick up is simply lost to whoever answers theirs.
What a missed call could be worth
Run your own numbers. Drag the sliders to match your shop, and the figure at the bottom updates as you go.
This is an estimate built from your own inputs, not a quote. Nobody can say a given missed call was a real customer, so read the result as a possibility, not a bill.
Many calls to small businesses go unanswered, and most callers never leave a message.
Not every missed call is a sale: some are spam, wrong numbers, or people you already serve. Your honest guess.
Phone callers are high-intent and convert far better than web forms. 30% is a conservative start for a prospect you actually talk to.
For most service businesses, a single job runs a few hundred dollars. Count repeat work and referrals and a customer's lifetime value reaches several thousand. Use the number that fits you.
You can't know any single missed call was a real customer; some are wrong numbers or sales calls. But across a month, if even 45% of the people who reached your voicemail would have booked, that works out to about $1,158.
And the fix scales with the math: even Standard, our $499-a-month plan, runs about 43% of that estimate, roughly $7,912 a year below it.
First AI Employee's Essential plan is $99 a month. The question isn't whether every missed call is a lost job; it's whether catching them clears $99.
Start a 7-day free trial →An estimate from your own inputs, not a quote. The default customer value above is just a starting estimate; set it to your own.
Sources: Invoca's home-services call benchmarks on how often calls go unanswered (a home-services benchmark; the defaults here are illustrative and fully adjustable); CRM Magazine on voicemail behavior; Invoca's call-conversion benchmarks on how well phone leads convert.
On the call, it handles all of it.
Lockout Dispatch
Captures the exact location and lockout type and alerts you to dispatch before they reach the next locksmith.
Job-Type Intake
Notes whether it’s a home, auto, or commercial lockout, a rekey, or a new install.
24/7 Emergency Answer
Picks up every overnight and weekend call instead of voicemail.
Quote-Ready Screening
Gathers the details so you can give an accurate price on dispatch.
Built for locksmith, not bolted on.
A generic answering bot reads one script for every business. Yours is built for the work.
In your callers' own words.
- “
I’m locked out of my car in a parking lot. Can someone come now?
- “
I locked myself out of my house, it’s midnight.
- “
I need all the locks on my new home rekeyed.
Job Briefs: built in for locksmith.
A photo of the leak, the dead unit, or the jammed door before you drive out, so you quote sooner and roll up with the right parts.
How Job Briefs works →Add-ons, rated for locksmith.
We rate every add-on for how much it actually earns its keep in your trade — the must-haves and the ones you can skip. Honest stars, not a sales pitch.
Every job throws off reviews and inbox questions; it answers both in your voice, so you stay visible without staying up late.
Homeowners pick the trade with the most five-star reviews; one emailed ask after the job keeps yours stacking up.
The homeowner comparing three companies at 9pm will type a question they’d never call about, and it answers and books, right on your site.
No trade lives or dies by the phone like a locksmith. Think about who's calling: someone locked out of their car in a parking lot, a homeowner on the porch at midnight, a shop owner who can't open in the morning. They're stressed, they want help now, and here's the part that should keep you up at night. They're not calling just you. They've got three locksmiths pulled up and they're dialing all of them. Whoever picks up first gets the job. The other two get nothing, and never even know there was a job to lose.
Speed to answer is the entire game
For most trades a missed call is a callback away from being saved. Not for a locksmith. The lockout call is the definition of an emergency that won't wait: the customer can't sit on hold and can't leave a voicemail to deal with later, because they're locked out right now. So they take the first competent voice that answers. If yours rings out, they're already talking to someone else before you'd have finished hearing the voicemail. The job was decided in the first ten seconds, and you weren't in the room.
And it's almost always one person's phone
What makes it worse is the math of the business. A locksmith is often a one-person operation: you, a van, and a ring of keys. Every call lands on the same phone, the one you're holding while your hands are busy cutting a key or pulling a lock. You can't be under a dashboard and on the phone at the same time, and you certainly can't take two calls at once when a Friday night sends them in a cluster. One person, a flood of emergencies, no way to catch them all.
What the missed ones are worth
Individually, not huge: a lockout might be a hundred dollars or two. But the one-van math is unforgiving. You can only be on one job at a time, and lockouts cluster, a Friday night, a bad-weather morning, when three of them land in the same half hour. The first you take. The other two, on a normal setup, are simply gone, dispatched to whoever answered while you had your hands in a lock. That isn't one missed ticket; it's the two-thirds of a busy hour's work you never had a chance to book. Run the volume through the calculator and the lost-job number climbs faster than the small ticket suggests, because it's counting the calls that came in while you were already working.
Something that answers when you can't
You can't promise to answer every call yourself; you're under a dashboard half the day. But something can. An AI receptionist built for locksmiths and the trades picks up right away, gets the location and the problem, tells the caller help is coming, and books or dispatches it while you keep working the lock in front of you. It catches the second and third call that come in while you're on the first. In a business where the first voice wins, a voice that answers when yours can't is the whole advantage.
What it costs to answer first
A flat $99 to $999 a month, no per-minute billing, with a 7-day free trial so you can hear it catch the calls you'd otherwise lose to the competitor with the faster thumb. For a locksmith this isn't a nice-to-have. The phone is the business. Here's how to pick the plan that fits your volume.
Every lockout call is a race you win in the first ring or lose for good. Make sure you're the one who answers.
Stop sending locksmith callers to voicemail.
Your AI receptionist answers 24/7, qualifies the caller, and books the work, so more of your calls turn into customers instead of a competitor's.
Not for: healthcare or anyone handling protected health information. We are not HIPAA-compliant and don't sign BAAs.