Bird and bat work splits your phone in two. On one side, a property manager collecting bids for pigeon netting over a loading dock. On the other, a homeowner who just watched bats pour out from under the ridge cap at dusk. Both call while you're 40 feet up on a boom lift with your hands full of hardware. Quickwire answers each by text within seconds, sorts commercial from residential, and books the site visit.
No contracts to sign today. See it work first.
Commercial bird work is a bidding race. When droppings start piling up at a storefront entrance or a warehouse dock fails an inspection, the facility manager calls three or four companies the same afternoon and the first one to schedule a site visit usually frames the whole bid. Those calls land squarely during business hours, which is exactly when you're on a lift or a roof and can't touch a phone. Bat calls stack the pressure differently: they surge in late summer, the callers have just discovered a colony over their bedroom, and exclusion timing windows make every lost week costly.
You're mid-job, after hours, or already on the line. The call rings out like it always has.
The caller instantly gets a text in your voice, asks what they need, and keeps the conversation alive.
Quickwire books the appointment and pings you with the details. You never stopped working.
Thursday, 1:20pm. The manager of a strip plaza calls Skyline Bird Solutions about pigeons fouling the walkway outside two tenant storefronts; the tenants are furious. You're mid-install on a parapet netting job, harnessed in. She gets a text in seconds: "This is Skyline Bird Solutions. We're on a job site. Is this for a commercial property? We can schedule a site assessment this week." She replies with the plaza address. By 1:35 the walkthrough is on Friday's calendar, and she's stopped dialing your competitors.
Yes. The templates are written with you, so during maternity-season blackout dates the conversation can explain that exclusion work resumes on a set date, book the inspection now, and reserve the caller's spot in the queue. You capture the job legally instead of losing the caller to confusion.
Property managers love it, because their real question is "who can get here first?" An instant text that confirms a site-visit date beats three competitors' voicemails. They're often juggling tenant complaints in writing anyway, so a text thread with a scheduled walkthrough fits exactly how they work.
That's an escalation, not a scheduling exchange. The conversation identifies a bat in the living space right away and can push those calls straight to your on-call phone, while routine colony and prevention inquiries book into the calendar. You define which situations interrupt you and which ones wait.
Niche is the argument for it. When you only get a handful of serious calls a week, each one carries real weight, and a single missed netting bid can be a five-figure loss. Low volume makes every saved call matter more, not less.
No. Quickwire works with your existing business number. Customers just see texts coming from you.
Drop your info and we'll get right back to you with the same instant text-back your bird control company's customers would get.
Text DEMO to the number below, or book a 15-minute call. No pitch. Just proof.