AI for Trade Firms in Leeds
Leeds trade firms deal with a city that keeps expanding and keeps building. Plumbers and heating engineers covering the Victorian and Edwardian terraces in Headingley, Hyde Park and Kirkstall, as well as the newer housing coming up in the suburbs around Morley and Pudsey. Electricians rewiring the older properties in Chapel Allerton and quoting commercial fit-out jobs for the office market around Wellington Place and the South Bank. Gas Safe engineers running landlord safety checks across the dense student rental market between Hyde Park and Burley, the biggest concentration of private rented housing in the north. Heat pump installers picking up grant-funded work as the city's older housing stock starts to move off gas. The owner is still in the van half the week, covering a city that sprawls in every direction. What quietly costs Leeds trade firms money is the admin either side of the job. The missed call on the road between Headingley and Roundhay. The quote typed at ten on a Sunday. The invoice in draft for three weeks running.
How we help trade firms in Leeds
Catching the calls you are missing right now
The engineer is in a loft in Hyde Park, the owner is under a boiler in Roundhay, the phone rings and goes to voicemail. The customer rings the next firm on the Google result. By the time anyone rings back, the job has been booked. You never see it leave, which is why it keeps happening.
We set up a handler that picks up every call the firm cannot reach, takes the customer's name, postcode, problem and urgency, and puts it in front of whoever runs the diary inside a minute. It can book a straightforward job straight into Tradify or ServiceM8 or whichever diary you already run. It flags emergencies so the on-call engineer sees them before the customer hangs up. If the query is outside your patch or your trade, it says so honestly.
Most trade firms that run this for a quarter find twenty to thirty per cent more jobs landing in the diary without a single extra advert. Across Leeds, where there is plenty of trade competition and customers are used to fast responses, getting there first matters. The work was already yours. It was just going to voicemail while the engineer was in a loft in Headingley.
Quoting domestic work in minutes instead of evenings
Leeds domestic quotes pile up the same way they do on every busy firm. Boiler swap in a Chapel Allerton semi, full rewire in a Hyde Park terrace, consumer unit upgrade in a Headingley flat conversion. The engineer took notes on site, the owner sketches the numbers from memory, and the Word document gets typed after ten o'clock. By Wednesday the customer has gone with someone who got their price out Tuesday morning. Most Leeds trade owners already know this is costing them work.
We wire up a tool that reads the site notes, pulls current merchant prices from Plumb Center, City Electrical or whoever you buy from, and drafts a quote in the firm's format inside a couple of minutes. Materials at today's rate, labour lined out the way the owner prices it, scope written in the voice the firm has always used. The owner still signs it off. The margin call still belongs to the owner. What gets taken off the evening is the retyping.
For a fit-out contractor we worked with in the north of England, a very similar approach took quote turnaround from six to ten hours down to ninety minutes and lifted monthly quote volume from twelve to twenty-six. The Leeds trade firm version is simpler, but the shape of the win is the same. Quotes go out the day the engineer walked the job. The Sunday evening paperwork slot gets its weekend back.
Invoicing before the cash flow bends
In a Leeds firm running ten or twelve engineers across the city, invoicing tends to drift. Jobs get completed in Morley, Pudsey and the city centre, the engineer closes them on the handheld, and the invoice sits in draft until someone has a quiet afternoon. The owner notices when the merchant bill lands and the account is thinner than expected.
We build a lightweight step that reads the closed job on Tradify or Joblogic or Xero, pulls in the parts used and the engineer's notes, drafts a clean invoice against the customer record, and queues it for the owner or the office manager to review and send. The human is still in charge of what goes out. Invoicing moves from a Friday catch-up day to a twenty-minute review each morning, and the average time from job done to invoice sent tends to drop from two or three weeks to inside forty-eight hours.
“Our customers compare us against installers who put a price on screen in ten seconds, and if we need a day or two we have lost them before the phone rings. The configurator closes that gap, and the CRM automation behind it has already plugged a ten-grand-a-month hole in the pipeline.”
One problem at a time
We work on one problem at a time. No transformation programmes, no glossy decks, no retainer signed before you have seen anything running. The first conversation is a free AI Opportunity Report. Fifteen minutes on the phone, and within twenty-four hours you get a written report back that picks out two or three places where AI would pay for itself quickly in your firm, with honest estimates of what it would cost and how long it would take.
If one of the ideas looks worth doing, we talk about doing it. If none of them do, the report is yours to keep and you have not signed anything. No sales pressure, no obligation to move faster than you want to.
We are based just up the road in the north east
We are based just up the road in the north east, about an hour and a half down the A1 from Leeds, close enough to come and sit down with you rather than doing it all on a video call. The owners we talk to started on the tools, still pick up the phone from the van half the week, and have no interest in another app that promises to run their business. What we automate is the paperwork around the job. The call that went to voicemail between Headingley and Roundhay. The quote typed at ten on a Sunday. The invoice sitting in draft for three weeks. The trade judgement stays with the engineer.
Common questions from Leeds trade firms
What kind of AI tools do you actually use?
Whatever fits the job. We are tool-agnostic and we do not resell anything. For Leeds trade firms it usually ends up being a phone handler for the missed calls, a quote drafter that plugs into the merchants you already buy from, and a light invoicing layer on top of Tradify, ServiceM8, Joblogic or whatever else you run. We do not replace software you are already paying for. We make it do more of the work.
Is this going to ring-fence me into some platform I have never heard of?
No. Everything we build sits alongside what you already run. If you are on Tradify, it integrates with Tradify. If you are on Xero, we leave Xero where it is and feed invoices into it. There is nothing proprietary holding you hostage if you ever want to walk away.
How long does a typical project take?
The first piece of work usually runs two to six weeks, from the first phone call to something actually working in your firm. We keep the first project small on purpose so you see a result quickly. Bigger pieces of work come later, once the first one has paid for itself.
Will the call handler answer like a robot?
Not if we set it up properly. The handler is built to sound like someone from the firm, ask the questions your office would ask, and tell the customer honestly what happens next. It captures the detail, puts it in front of whoever runs the diary, and gets out of the way. Most customers do not notice they have not spoken to an engineer until the real one rings them back.
Will this replace my office staff?
No. Every trade firm we have worked with has ended up with the same team doing more of the work they actually enjoy and less of the paperwork nobody wanted. The goal is to take the Sunday-evening admin off the owner, not to shrink the team. Good office support in a Leeds trade firm is hard enough to hold on to without anyone losing them on purpose.
Run a plumbing, heating or electrical firm in Leeds?
Fifteen minutes from you, and a detailed written report back within twenty-four hours. No sales call required.
