Find where new leads start leaking.
Answer a few questions about what happens after someone reaches out. The result gives you the first follow-up system to clean up.
Free check
Check your follow-up path.
This is for the moment after the inquiry: reply speed, tracking, second follow-up, and who owns the next step.
Lead generation is weaker when follow-up depends on memory.
Most small businesses do not lose every lead in one dramatic moment. They lose them in the quiet places: a slow reply, a missing status, no second follow-up, or an owner who has to remember everything.
A good lead follow-up system does not need to be complicated. It needs to capture the right details, respond quickly, make the next step clear, and remind the right person before the lead goes cold.
Use this check to name the first leak. Then fix that one path before adding more lead sources.
Keep the search-to-lead path connected.
AI search visibility, service pages, content workflows, and lead follow-up work best when they support the same buyer journey.
What this tool can and cannot do.
What is a lead follow-up system?
A lead follow-up system is the process that captures an inquiry, sends or drafts the first response, tracks status and owner, and reminds the business when the next step has not happened.
Should lead follow-up be automated?
Parts of it can be automated, especially capture, reminders, routing, and draft replies. The judgment, tone, and final sales conversation should stay human when the lead needs context.
What is the first lead follow-up fix to make?
Start with the point where leads most often go quiet: first response time, missing status, unclear owner, or no second follow-up.
Your best answers should be easier to find. And easier to act on.
If I can help, I will tell you whether I would start with AI search visibility, service pages, lead capture, or follow-up. If I cannot, I will say that too.
Apply to work with me →