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For tradespeople

AI for trades: practical uses that aren’t hype

Five things AI can actually help with for a plumber, electrician, or builder — and three things it can’t.

Most articles called “AI for trades” are written by people who’ve never met a plumber. They talk about “AI-driven workflow transformation” while you’re trying to remember whether you’ve been paid for the last boiler job.

Here’s the version with the marketing waffle taken out. Five things AI actually helps with, three it doesn’t, and how to test before you spend a penny.

1. Missed-call SMS auto-replies

You’re on a job. Your phone rings. You can’t answer. The caller leaves nothing, or a vague voicemail, and rings the next plumber on Google. Most of those are gone forever.

A missed-call SMS auto-reply texts them back within seconds — “Sorry I missed your call, I’m on a job. Text me the postcode and a quick description and I’ll quote when I’m free.” You don’t even need AI for the reply itself. AI helps with the bit that comes next — classifying urgent vs not, drafting a follow-up, flagging anything that looks like an emergency callout. Setup: an hour. Effect: noticeable.

2. Quote intake that asks the right questions

How many times have you arrived at a job and the photo the customer sent doesn’t show the actual problem? A simple AI-assisted enquiry form can ask follow-up questions based on what the customer typed: “You mentioned a leak under the sink — could you send a photo of where it’s dripping from?” “Is the water still running, or have you turned it off?”

The aim isn’t to replace your judgment. It’s to make sure that by the time you read the enquiry, you already know what you’re walking into.

3. The repeat-question FAQ

If you and your staff are answering the same five questions every week — do you cover my area, when can you come, can you take card, do you do weekends, what does a callout cost — that’s a clue. A clear FAQ page (with or without a chatbot in front of it) deflects half of them.

You don’t need AI for the FAQ. You do need to have written the answers down. (See business knowledge stuck in your head — same article, different angle.)

4. Review requests and review responses

Reviews are free marketing. They’re also chronically underused. Most trades businesses don’t ask for them — or ask once, badly, on the day of the job when the customer is paying you and not thinking about Google.

An automated review request a few days after the job — sent by text, with a one-tap Google link — multiplies your review count. AI can also draft polite, professional responses to the reviews you get (including the awkward ones), which you check and send. Five minutes saved per response, ten responses a week, six months of compound effect.

5. Follow-up message templates

You quoted £1,400 for a bathroom job. They didn’t come back. Three days later, was it the price? The timing? Did they forget? You don’t know unless you ask.

AI can draft a follow-up message tailored to the customer (their name, the job, the date you quoted), in your voice, that you tweak and send. It’s not magic. It’s just one less thing to write from scratch when you’re tired at 8pm.

What AI shouldn’t do for trades, yet

Quote actual prices without you

Pricing a job is judgement. Photos don’t show what’s behind the wall. An AI tool that “quotes automatically” will undercharge for the messy jobs and overcharge for the easy ones, and you’ll lose both.

Take final bookings without your sign-off

Diary chaos. Double bookings. Customers turning up on a day you didn’t agree to. A booking widget that suggests slots and a workflow that asks you to confirm is the right shape. Fully-automatic anything is asking for trouble.

Replace your judgment on dodgy customers

You’ve been doing this twenty years. You know the customer who’s going to argue about the bill before they’ve seen it. AI doesn’t.

How to test before buying

One tool at a time. One clear success metric. One month.

Example: “If I add a missed-call SMS auto-reply, does my missed-call-to-booking conversion go up?” Set a baseline. Add the tool. Measure. If yes, keep it. If no, kill it.

Don’t buy three things at once. You won’t know which one helped.

Where the audit looks at this

If you’re a trades business, the AI Opportunity Audit specifically checks which of these five would move the needle for you — and which would be a waste. The recommendations are practical, named, and ordered by likely impact.

Which of these would help your business?

The audit picks the one or two of these that would actually move the needle for your trade — not a long list of “maybes”.