Key takeaways
- Businesses that respond to a lead within one hour are 7x more likely to qualify it. Within five minutes is the gold standard.
- The average business takes 42 hours to respond, which means simply being fast is an available competitive advantage for you today.
- 78% of customers buy from the first responder. Speed is the tiebreaker, and it is entirely within your control.
- Most sales close on the fifth follow-up or later. Consistent, professional persistence is a system you can install, not a personality trait you have to hire.
- The opportunity: capturing the leads you already generate is the highest-ROI growth move available to most service businesses.
The five-minute window, and why it is an opportunity
The foundational research examined 2,241 U.S. companies and measured how long each took to respond to a new web lead. Companies that responded within one hour were seven times more likely to have a meaningful conversation with the decision maker than those that waited even an hour longer. Related research found that responding within five minutes, compared with thirty, raised the odds of reaching the lead many times over.
The same study found the average response time across companies was 42 hours. Read those two findings together and something encouraging emerges: the bar is low, and the reward for clearing it is enormous. A service business does not need a bigger ad budget or a famous brand to win more work. It needs to be genuinely responsive, and responsiveness can be built.
Likelihood of qualifying a lead, by response time
Source: Harvard Business Review study of 2,241 U.S. companies; InsideSales response-time research. Bars illustrate relative likelihood.
Why good businesses respond slowly
Slow response is almost never a motivation problem. It is a structural one, and understanding the structure is what makes it fixable:
- Leads arrive on many channels. Website forms, Google messages, social inquiries, phone, text, and email each get checked at different rhythms. Consolidating them into one responsive flow is a solvable engineering task.
- Your best people are busy doing the work. In a service business, the people who could respond are on jobs and with customers. That is as it should be, which is exactly why the first response belongs to a system.
- Follow-up relies on memory. The quote sent Tuesday deserves a check-in Thursday. Systems remember these things effortlessly; busy humans understandably do not.
The follow-up opportunity
Response speed opens the conversation; follow-through wins the work. Sales research replicated across decades shows that the large majority of closed deals happen on the fifth contact or later, while most businesses stop after one or two attempts. The gap between those two numbers is unclaimed revenue, sitting in every service business's pipeline.
When sales close vs. when follow-up stops
Source: published sales-persistence research, replicated across multiple studies.
Professional persistence is not pestering. A well-designed sequence spaces its touches sensibly, offers something useful in each one, and stops instantly when the prospect engages. Prospects consistently read it as what it is: a business that wants the work and runs itself well. That impression alone differentiates you before the job begins.
What a responsive business looks like in practice
1. Every inquiry acknowledged in seconds
Whatever the channel, the lead immediately receives a personal-feeling response confirming a real process has begun, with a genuine next step: a booking link, a couple of qualifying questions, or a callback time. This single layer moves you from the 42-hour average into the top tier.
2. Real engagement in the first minute
Modern AI systems go beyond acknowledgment: they answer the prospect's questions, gather the details you would ask for anyway, and book the appointment directly into your calendar. The prospect experiences immediate, competent service, which is the first impression you want anyway.
3. Follow-through that runs on rails
Five to seven professional touches across channels, written in your voice, spaced over days, stopping on engagement. Installed once, it works on every lead, every time, including the ones that arrive during your busiest week.
4. A pipeline you can see
One dashboard showing every lead and its stage. Clarity here compounds: you learn which sources produce your best work and where your process serves customers well.
The opportunity, quantified
Consider a business receiving 30 leads a month, closing 25% of the leads it genuinely engages, at a $1,500 average job. Engaging even ten additional leads a month that currently slip through means roughly 2.5 additional jobs: about $45,000 a year, from demand the business already generated. That is why speed-to-lead is usually the first system we recommend: it multiplies what you already have, rather than requiring you to buy more.
Your move
Curious where your response process stands? The free Automation Gap Diagnosis measures your current response times, maps your follow-up coverage, and shows what closing the gaps is worth in your numbers. Twenty minutes, and the findings are yours either way.
Get Your Free Gap DiagnosisFrequently asked questions
What is speed-to-lead?
Speed-to-lead is the time between a prospect contacting your business and your first meaningful response. It is one of the strongest predictors of winning the job: businesses that respond within five minutes dramatically outperform those that respond hours later.
What is a good lead response time?
Under five minutes is the gold standard, and under 60 seconds is achievable with automation. For context, the average business takes 42 hours. Improving from average to excellent is one of the fastest revenue gains available to a service business.
How can a small business respond to leads faster?
With systems rather than heroics: instant acknowledgment on every channel, automated engagement that offers real next steps within seconds, and follow-up sequences that continue professionally until the lead responds. The technology to do this well is now affordable for any small business.
How many times should you follow up with a lead?
Research consistently shows most sales close on the fifth contact or later. A respectful, well-spaced sequence of five to seven touches, stopping the moment the prospect engages, captures revenue that single-attempt follow-up leaves unclaimed.