Track the drain before it becomes water damage
You service thousands of AC units — then lose the relationship until something leaks. A QR service passport on every unit keeps the maintenance history alive, the reminders going out, and the rebooking one tap away. From your customers, to you.
How it works
Under two minutes for the tech. A customer for life for you.
Tag the unit
Tech sticks a QR label by the unit or drain, runs the checklist — drain treatment, float-switch test, pump condition, photos — and records the next service date.
Customer claims it
Homeowner scans, claims the unit with a phone number or email, and now owns a live service record instead of a fading memory of "some guy in spring."
The season sells for you
Seasonal reminders go out under your brand. One tap opens your booking or emergency line. Your dashboard shows every unit due, overdue, or repeatedly problematic.
The math
What 1,000 tagged units are worth
Conservative test math — the pilot exists to verify it on your book, not to take our word for it.
Season model
Start here
Contractor pilot: your trucks, one season
We set you up with labels, the technician workflow, and the customer reminder engine. You run it on real service calls. If it doesn't produce measurable bookings or plan conversions, you stop.
Boundaries
A retention layer — not another everything-app
Not field-service management
No dispatch, invoicing, payroll, or inventory. Drip AC is the narrow layer your FSM doesn't do: the customer-facing asset history that brings the next booking.
Not a leak sensor
Float switches and water sensors exist. When you install them, their events attach to the same unit history — one record per asset, whatever the hardware.
Property portfolios later
The same passport data model scales to apartment operators and hotels (~€1–€3/unit/month) once the contractor loop is proven.