Cancellation recovery for roofers: never waste a crew-day again
In roofing, your biggest fixed cost walks onto the job site every morning: the crew. Whether they install a roof or stand around because a job fell through, they cost the same. That's why a cancelled or rained-out slot is so brutal — it's not just lost revenue, it's revenue you're paying for and not collecting. Cancellation recovery makes sure an open slot gets refilled fast, automatically.
You pay the crew whether the roof gets done or not. An empty slot is the most expensive hour in roofing.
Why open slots stay empty
When a job cancels, refilling it means someone has to stop what they're doing, figure out who's ready, and call around hoping somebody can move up. During a busy stretch nobody has time, so the slot just sits — a crew-day of margin gone. Multiply that across a season of weather delays and reschedules and it's one of the quietest, biggest leaks in a roofing business.
The fix is a waitlist that works itself — so the moment a slot opens, the right homeowner gets the offer and the gap closes on its own.
How it works
How Workfloor refills a slot
It keeps a live, ready waitlist
Approved insurance jobs, flexible-date homeowners, and repairs that can slot in on short notice all sit on a prioritized waitlist, ready to go.
It fills the gap the instant it opens
When a job cancels, Workfloor messages the waitlist in priority order over text. The first yes locks the slot — usually before you've finished rerouting the crew.
It saves the cancelled job too
The rained-out homeowner doesn't get dropped; Workfloor reschedules them the same way 24/7 Lead Response books a fresh inspection. Nobody falls through the cracks.
Questions
Frequently asked questions
Automatically — homeowners who are approved and flexible, or who asked for the soonest possible date, get added as leads come through. You can set the priority rules.
When you mark a job rained-out, Workfloor opens the slot to the waitlist and reschedules the original job — keeping your crews productive on the days weather allows.
No — they get a friendly "a spot just opened, want it?" offer, and only the ones who said they wanted the soonest date are contacted. It's a welcome message, not spam.
