Your callers already have parts in hand. A fab shop with a rush batch, a restorer with a frame, a fleet manager with rims stacked on a pallet: powder coating calls are ready-to-buy calls. They're also the easiest to lose, because you're at the booth in a respirator or pulling a rack out of the oven when the phone rings. Quickwire texts back in seconds and books the drop-off before they haul those parts somewhere else.
No contracts to sign today. See it work first.
Powder coating runs on batch flow, and batch flow hates interruptions. Masking, spraying, curing: none of it lets you peel off to catch a call, so the phone rings out all day. But every one of those callers has physical parts and a deadline, which means they will drive to whichever shop answers. Worse, your best callers are B2B: fabricators and manufacturers looking for a coating partner they can send work to every week. Miss that first call and you didn't lose one job, you lost a recurring account you'll never know was shopping.
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.
Saturday morning, 10:20. You're pulling a rack of ornamental fence panels out of the oven when a call comes from a guy restoring a '72 CJ5: frame, axles, and a set of wheels, hoping for satin black. It rings out. His phone lights up: "Peak Powder Coat here, mid-bake at the moment. What parts are you looking to coat?" He texts photos of the frame on a trailer. By noon he's booked to drop everything Tuesday and you quoted it from the pictures.
It gets you photos, part counts, dimensions, and the color the caller wants, all before you've said a word. You still set the price, but you're pricing from pictures in a thread instead of chasing a voicemail that says "I've got some parts."
It can share your standard turnaround up front and ask about the caller's deadline, so rush work is flagged before you commit the oven. Callers with flexible timing book into your normal flow; the ones with a Friday deadline reach you immediately.
The conversation asks whether it's a one-time job or recurring work, so a fabricator hunting for a coating partner gets flagged as exactly that. Those calls are worth interrupting a batch for; Quickwire makes sure you know one came in while it's still warm.
Alerts land as texts and stay put until you look, and nothing depends on you reacting instantly. The caller has already been answered and the conversation is moving. You step in when you're out of the booth, not mid-spray.
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 coating shop's customers would get.
Text DEMO to the number below, or book a 15-minute call. No pitch. Just proof.