Polite Estimate Follow-Up Texts That Don’t Sound Pushy
Short follow-up texts contractors can send when a quote is open but the prospect has gone quiet.
Quick answer
A good follow-up system is polite, specific, and timed around the customer’s decision. Many homeowners are not ignoring you because they are uninterested. They are comparing options, waiting on a spouse, dealing with work, or unsure what the next step is.
The practical answer
A good follow-up system is polite, specific, and timed around the customer’s decision. Many homeowners are not ignoring you because they are uninterested. They are comparing options, waiting on a spouse, dealing with work, or unsure what the next step is.
The goal is to make the next step obvious without sounding desperate or pushy.
A simple follow-up rhythm
Send the first follow-up the same day as the estimate, another the next day, another after three days, and a final helpful check-in about a week later. For larger jobs, add a two-week value-based follow-up that answers a common concern.
Each touch should add clarity: timing, scope, availability, warranty, prep, payment, or what happens after approval.
Where LeadSprint fits
LeadSprint gives owners ready-to-use SMS, email, and call script patterns, plus lead statuses like New, Qualified, Quoted, Followed up, Won, and Lost, so every open quote has a visible next step.
Use this checklist
- Keep it short
- Reference the project
- Offer to answer questions
- Avoid guilt or pressure
- Make approval easy
Want this built for your business?
LeadSprint helps home-service businesses respond faster, write better follow-ups, track open opportunities, and keep every quote moving without a heavy CRM.