Towing leads

More roadside calls your dispatch can actually serve.

Roadside leads need location, vehicle, urgency, service type, and coverage area clarity. We help reduce calls your dispatcher cannot take.

The dispatch moment

The call has to be serviceable before dispatch moves.

Roadside demand is urgent, but urgency alone is not enough. Dispatch needs location, vehicle, service type, and coverage fit before the call can move.

  • location
  • vehicle
  • service type
  • coverage fit

Towing & Roadside: Tow Calls

When someone is stuck, the next call should be obvious.

Roadside demand is immediate: the customer is stuck, late, or unsafe. Your towing and roadside operation should make dispatch coverage, response confidence, and the next call feel obvious.

  • Coverage

    Make the service area clear.

  • Dispatch

    Get location and vehicle context fast.

  • Urgency

    Help the customer act now.

  • Completed dispatches

    Know which calls became completed service.

What a useful inquiry already includes

Tune for calls your dispatch can move.

The lead should quickly show where the driver is, what they need, what vehicle is involved, and whether your team can respond.

  • driver location
  • service type
  • vehicle context
  • urgency
  • dispatch route

Towing & Roadside

Bring in

  • tow calls
  • jump starts
  • lockout requests
  • roadside assistance

Filter out

  • outside-service-area calls
  • unsupported vehicles
  • vendor solicitations
  • low-detail emergencies

Useful starting points

Lead sources to test first.

The channel should match how this buyer starts the conversation, not just where ads are easy to buy.

Tell us what roadside work you want more of.

Start with the towing, jump starts, lockouts, and roadside calls your dispatch wants.

Start with the roadside work you want.

A few words about your coverage area is enough.