Inventory, the schedule, and the licensing binder all route through you. Here's a morning where the back office runs itself, so you stop being the system the company depends on.
Two products short for today's routes. Two applicator licenses up for renewal. One route a tech down. You used to find each of these the hard way.
Every state you work in has its own renewal. A lapsed license pulls a tech off the road. This watches all of them and flags the one that matters first.
Stock gets counted against today's actual route load, not a guess. When it drops below what the day needs, the purchase order is ready before the shortage costs you a stop.
One tech is out sick. Instead of you redrawing the day on a whiteboard, the week refills around the gap and the affected customers get a new window.
Someone applied for the inventory and HR role. They get answered in your voice, screened against what the job actually needs, and booked. You meet the ones worth meeting.
One summary before the day starts. Inventory handled, licenses on track, routes covered, one interview booked. The only thing left is the single decision that actually needs you.
Reorder drafted. Licenses on track. Routes covered after the call-out. 1 interview booked for Wed.
Approve the Termidor reorder, then you are done.
The operating structure a family company usually only gets by hiring three people, tuned to how a multi-state pest control business actually runs.
Since 1977 the company has run because you hold all of it together. This is the morning it holds together without you being the thing in the middle.
If we're wrong, the conversation ends here. If we're close, this is rarely the only thing you're holding together by hand.
We built this from public information. How close did we get?
Tell us where we got it right, or where we missed. Under a minute.