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Representative automation builds

Examples of systemsRLS can build.

These are not client case studies or claimed results.They are practical blueprints for the kinds of automation systems businesses usually need first.

01

Service Company

A home services, field services, or local operations business that gets leads from calls, website forms, referrals, and paid ads.

The goal is a cleaner lead-to-booked-job system where fewer inquiries sit untouched and the owner can see what needs attention.

Common breakdown

  • New leads wait too long before the first response
  • Follow-up depends on whoever remembers to do it
  • Scheduling, quoting, and job updates live across disconnected tools

System blueprint

  • Instant lead capture from forms, calls, and ad campaigns
  • Automatic SMS and email follow-up until a reply or appointment is booked
  • Job intake handoff into the CRM, calendar, or dispatch workflow
  • Owner view showing new leads, pending follow-ups, booked jobs, and stalled opportunities

Modeled trigger

Lead flow is steady, but speed-to-lead and follow-up consistency are uneven.

Likely build path

Connect inquiry sources to a CRM, trigger first-response messages, create appointment tasks, and show open lead stages in one dashboard.

What to measure

Track response time, booking rate, missed follow-ups, quote volume, and booked revenue by source.

02

Professional Services Company

A consulting, accounting, legal, advisory, or specialized services firm managing inquiries, client intake, document requests, and internal handoffs.

The goal is a calmer intake and onboarding process where every prospect and client has a clear next step.

Common breakdown

  • Prospects submit incomplete information
  • Client onboarding requires repeated manual emails
  • Work moves between inboxes, documents, calendars, and project tools with no single view

System blueprint

  • Structured intake forms that route inquiries by service type and urgency
  • Automated next-step emails, document requests, and appointment reminders
  • Internal task creation for review, proposal, onboarding, and follow-up stages
  • Pipeline view for open opportunities, waiting-on-client items, and active client starts

Modeled trigger

The firm has demand, but intake quality and client handoffs create avoidable admin drag.

Likely build path

Standardize intake, route requests by fit and urgency, automate document collection, and create internal review tasks.

What to measure

Track incomplete submissions, time-to-consult, proposal follow-up, onboarding status, and waiting-on-client items.

03

Mid-Level Resource or Energy-Style Operations Company

A growing operations-heavy company with field activity, vendors, internal requests, reporting needs, approvals, and cross-team coordination.

The goal is a practical operations layer that reduces status-chasing and gives leadership a clearer view of what is moving, blocked, or overdue.

Common breakdown

  • Operational requests arrive through email, spreadsheets, texts, and meetings
  • Approvals and vendor follow-ups are hard to track
  • Leadership needs visibility without asking every team for manual status updates

System blueprint

  • Central request intake for operations, vendor, field, and administrative needs
  • Automated routing by department, urgency, location, or request type
  • Approval reminders and escalation paths for items that sit too long
  • Operational dashboard showing open requests, blockers, aging items, and completed work

Modeled trigger

The company is large enough that manual status checks, approvals, and spreadsheet updates slow execution.

Likely build path

Create a central operations intake layer, route work by rule, notify approvers, escalate aging items, and report open work by team.

What to measure

Track request aging, approval cycle time, blocked work, vendor follow-up status, and completed request volume.

Next step

Want to map one of these to your business?

Request a System Audit