Built for contractors who hate software.
You got into plumbing, HVAC, electrical, lawn care - whatever your trade is - because you are good at it and you like doing it. You did not start a business so you could spend your evenings pecking at a CRM that was designed for a Fortune 500 sales team.
The reality for most contractors is pretty simple. You finish a job, you move on to the next one. You mean to ask for a Google review but you forget. You send a quote and the customer goes quiet and you never follow up because you have three other calls to make. Six months later, a past customer needs the same service again but they cannot remember your name, so they search Google and pick the first result with enough reviews.
None of this happens because you are bad at your job. It happens because you are busy doing your job. And the software that is supposed to help usually makes things worse - dashboards you never open, features you never use, onboarding flows that take longer than the job itself.
Trikkl exists to fix that. We built one tool that does three things well: it asks your customers for reviews at the right moment, it chases quotes so you do not have to, and it brings past customers back when they are due for service again. That is it. No bloated feature list, no certification courses, no enterprise pricing tiers. You plug it in, it runs in the background, and your business grows while you focus on the work.
Every feature in Trikkl was built because a real contractor told us they needed it. Not because a product manager thought it would look good on a comparison chart. If it does not save you time or make you money, it does not belong here.
Who built this
Trikkl was built by a small team that watched local contractors struggle with the same problems over and over: forgetting to follow up on quotes, losing track of past customers, and watching competitors with more Google reviews get the calls. We are not a venture-backed startup trying to become the next Salesforce. We are a focused group that cares about building something that actually works for the people who use it.
We talk to contractors every week. We read every support message. We use the product ourselves. When something is broken or missing, we hear about it fast and we fix it fast. That is the advantage of staying small and staying close to the people you serve.