> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.aresdeploy.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# What Are the Speed-to-Lead Statistics for Home Service Businesses?

> A grounded look at what the speed-to-lead research actually says for home service businesses, separating the one well-documented study from the many uncited industry numbers.

<Note>
  **Key takeaway:** Speed to lead is the time between a prospect's first contact and your first real response. The one number with solid research behind it comes from Harvard Business Review: leads contacted within an hour are roughly seven times more likely to qualify than leads contacted even slightly later.
</Note>

Speed to lead is the most under-priced lever most home service businesses have, and also the most rumor-filled topic in local marketing. The one figure with a named study behind it: waiting past an hour to respond can cut your odds of qualifying a lead to roughly a seventh of what they'd otherwise be. Almost every other "stat" repeated in webinars about lead response time is an unattributed estimate, not a citation.

Speed to lead is defined as the elapsed time between when a prospect submits a form, calls, or texts and when your business delivers a genuine response, not an autoreply. Lead response time means something narrower: the raw clock time to first human or AI contact, independent of what the conversation accomplishes afterward. The two terms get used interchangeably, but the first one is really about the whole intake system, not just a stopwatch.

## What is speed to lead, exactly?

A lead can arrive through a website form, a Google Business Profile message, a phone call, a Meta lead ad, or a text to a number on a truck wrap. Speed to lead measures the gap from that moment to the first substantive reply, whether that's a technician calling back, an office manager texting, or an AI system responding automatically. It matters because home service leads are almost always shopping more than one company at once, and the first to respond usually has the best shot at the job, regardless of who quotes the lowest price.

## What do the speed-to-lead statistics actually show?

There is exactly one rigorously sourced number worth anchoring on. Oldroyd and McElheran's research, published through Harvard Business Review, found that companies contacting a lead within an hour were about seven times more likely to qualify that lead than companies that waited even a bit longer. That's the finding. It doesn't say five minutes beats ten, and it doesn't claim a specific multiplier for same-day versus next-day response, even though those comparisons get attached to it constantly in marketing content.

Beyond that study, the landscape gets murkier. Industry surveys commonly report that a large share of consumers expect a reply within about ten minutes, though the exact percentage shifts by survey and few are peer-reviewed. Various marketing and software vendor studies report conversion rates dropping sharply, sometimes by half or more, once response time stretches from a few minutes into the one-hour range, but the precise multiplier differs by study and how "conversion" gets defined. Treat those ranges as directional, not as a formula.

## How fast do home service businesses actually respond today?

Secret-shopper audits and CRM data pulled by marketing firms and software vendors turn up wide gaps between businesses. Industry surveys commonly report that average first response in local service categories often falls somewhere between thirty minutes and several hours, with a meaningful share of leads never getting a human reply at all, especially ones that arrive nights, weekends, or mid-job. Exact percentages vary too much by source to quote as gospel; the consistent pattern is that response times are inconsistent and often slower than owners assume.

## Speed to lead vs. the rest of the funnel

| Response window   | What the research and industry surveys commonly report                                                                                   |
| ----------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Under 5 minutes   | Frequently cited as the window tied to the strongest connect rates, though the underlying studies vary in rigor                          |
| 5-30 minutes      | Still considered a strong window; industry sources commonly describe this as the point before drop-off starts accelerating               |
| Within 1 hour     | The HBR-linked research (Oldroyd & McElheran) found qualification odds here running roughly seven times higher than past the 1-hour mark |
| Same day          | Commonly described in speed-to-lead literature as "too late" for a meaningful share of leads, though some still convert                  |
| Next day or later | Widely reported as the range with the steepest drop-off and the highest lead abandonment                                                 |

## Why does response speed matter more in home services specifically?

A homeowner with a leaking water heater or a broken AC in July isn't shopping the way someone browsing a SaaS product is. They typically contact three to five local businesses within the same short window and go with whoever responds first with a credible answer, often before price ever enters the conversation. That behavior is what makes speed to lead disproportionately valuable for plumbers, HVAC companies, roofers, electricians, and similar trades compared to businesses selling something with a longer, more deliberate buying cycle.

## What's actually slowing home service businesses down?

A few patterns show up again and again in how leads get lost:

* Leads land in a shared inbox, a voicemail box, or a Facebook message tab that nobody checks consistently, especially after hours.
* Owners and office staff are on job sites or driving between calls, not sitting near a phone or laptop when a lead comes in.
* Follow-up depends on someone remembering to do it manually, so leads that don't convert on the first touch quietly go cold.
* There's no defined after-hours or weekend coverage plan, even though a large share of home service inquiries happen outside a 9-to-5 window.

## Does speed to lead affect anything beyond the first booking?

Yes, and this is where speed connects to the rest of the business. Bain's research associated with Fred Reichheld has long shown that even a 5% improvement in customer retention can raise profits by something in the range of 25% to 95%, depending on the industry, and a fast, competent first response sets the tone for whether a customer sticks around for the next job. BrightLocal's consumer research consistently finds that most people read reviews before choosing a local business, and a customer who got a fast, clear response is a lot more likely to leave one. Google's own data indicates that a significant share of searches carry local intent, meaning the business that shows up and responds fastest locally is often the one that wins the click in the first place.

## How Ares closes the speed-to-lead gap

Ares is built specifically around this gap rather than around ad management or CRM features as an afterthought. It runs as an AI operator on top of GoHighLevel, responding to leads by SMS, email, or chat within seconds instead of hours, qualifying them against the business's own criteria, and booking the appointment directly. If a lead goes quiet, Ares keeps following up on a defined nurture sequence, and escalates to a human owner when a conversation genuinely needs judgment. Worth being direct about scope: Ares is text-first and does not answer phone calls today; call tracking and voice answering are on the roadmap, not live. Ares also manages Google Business Profile activity and automated review requests, and can run Meta lead-generation campaigns with owner approval before any spend. Multi-location operators get one fleet dashboard instead of a separate report per location. Pricing is \$299 a month standard, or \$100 per seat for enterprise, with no long-term contract required.

None of this replaces judgment calls about pricing, positioning, or which jobs to chase, the way a genuinely good [marketing partner](/guides/should-i-fire-my-agency-use-ai) still can. What it replaces is the part where a good lead sits in a queue for three hours because everyone was on a roof. For more on what happens after that first response, see how [follow-up sequences](/leads/follow-up) and [booking flows](/leads/booking) fit into the same system.

## Frequently asked questions

<AccordionGroup>
  <Accordion title="What is a good speed-to-lead time for a home service business?">
    There's no single certified number, but the one well-documented study, Oldroyd and McElheran's research published through Harvard Business Review, ties responses within an hour to roughly seven times better qualification odds than waiting longer. Most operators treat minutes, not hours, as the realistic target.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Is the '5 minutes vs 30 minutes' lead response stat real?">
    Versions of that comparison circulate widely, but they aren't part of the specific, citable HBR finding. The verified research compares responding within an hour versus waiting past an hour; more granular minute-by-minute claims should be treated as unverified industry estimates rather than settled fact.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Why do home service leads convert worse than other industries when response is slow?">
    Home service inquiries are often urgent and multi-sourced. A homeowner typically contacts several local companies in the same short window and books with whoever responds first with a credible answer, which makes response speed matter more here than in categories with longer consideration cycles.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Can AI actually respond to leads faster than a human team?">
    Yes, within the channels it's built for. An AI operator like Ares responds by text, email, or chat within seconds around the clock, without needing someone to be near a phone. It's text-first, not a phone-answering system, so calls still route to a human today.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Does faster lead response actually improve retention and reviews, or just first bookings?">
    Both, based on adjacent research rather than a single unified study. Faster, more competent first contact sets a tone that correlates with retention economics described in Bain's research, and BrightLocal's surveys show most consumers check reviews before booking, so a good first impression compounds into future business.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="What's the difference between speed to lead and average lead response time?">
    Lead response time is the raw clock measurement of how long first contact took. Speed to lead is the broader concept: the system, staffing, and follow-up behavior that determines whether that clock measurement is fast consistently, not just on the leads someone happened to notice.
  </Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
