Find pest-control revenue sitting in old quotes, seasonal inquiries, and recurring-plan follow-up.
Channel Valve reviews old treatment quotes, recurring-plan interest, form response, and seasonal callback gaps so more existing demand turns into booked work.
Stale-lead reactivation can start performance-based: you pay when recovered opportunities become booked jobs.
Revenue Leak Audit
Last 30 days · Sample Pest Control company
Recoverable pipeline
$42,800
Illustrative example
Unsold estimates
14
not reworked
Stale opps
37
ready to re-open
Missed calls
18
last 30 days
Pipeline
$42.8k
illustrative
Termite inspection
May 30 - Quote sent
Mosquito treatment
Jun 3 - Web form
Recurring service
Jun 1 - Plan inquiry
Why this page exists
A trade-specific audit, not a generic intro call.
Pest control has recurring revenue upside, but only when quote requests and old opportunities get worked with steady follow-up instead of seasonal improvisation.
Old treatment quotes and inspection requests with no follow-up
Recurring-plan inquiries that never became booked service
Seasonal web forms that sat too long before response
Canceled or no-answer opportunities worth a clean reactivation pass
We look for recoverable demand before prescribing the fix.
The audit is built to show whether the opportunity is real: which records should be reworked, who owns the next step, and what a recovered booked job should mean before implementation begins.
What to have ready
Old quote or inspection list
Recurring-plan inquiry list
Web form submissions
Current seasonal follow-up process
Sample audit data on this page is illustrative. Your audit is based on your real workflow, records, and follow-up gaps.
Calendar
Pick a time for the reactivation audit.
Choose a time that works. The call is diagnostic: we look first for unsold estimates, stale opportunities, missed calls, and slow follow-up before recommending what to fix first. Stale-lead reactivation can start performance-based.
Having trouble with the embedded calendar?
Open calendar