For roofing contractors
They sign on the spot
when they can see it.
Take one photo of the house. Three minutes later, hand them a tablet showing their roof, on their house, in every option you sell.
What that costs you
Three ways the deal dies in the driveway.
"Let me think about it."
Code for: I can't picture it. They go home. The momentum dies. You don't hear back.
"I have to talk to my wife."
Translation: you lost the room. The decision now happens without you standing there.
The cheaper guy wins.
Three quotes later, it's a price race. You either give up margin or give up the job.
The shift
Show them the finished roof on their house.
On your tablet. Before you leave the driveway.

They see it.
No imagination required. The render is the proof.
They get excited.
The spouse is right there looking at it. The decision happens in the driveway.
They commit.
You stop being one of three quotes. You become the one who showed them their dream house.
How it works
From one photo to closed job. Three steps. Three minutes.

Snap one photo.
Walk up to the house. Pull out your phone or tablet. Take a regular photo of the front. No tripod. No special angle. Anything from the curb works.

Open the web app. Pick the options.
Nothing to download. Open the link in any browser, drop in the photo, and tick every roof option you want to show. Hit render.

Show them. Or email it.
Three minutes later the renders are ready. Show the homeowner on the spot, or download and send them in a follow-up email that night.
The unfair advantage
You don't need a better pitch.
You need to be the only contractor with the picture.
Every other quote is words on paper. Yours is their actual house, in every option you sell.

What changes on day one
Three things that happen the week you start using this.
- 01
Upsells sell themselves.
Render the architectural shingle next to the 3-tab. They'll pick the upgrade without you saying a word.
- 02
You crush the second opinion.
When the next contractor shows up with a brochure, you've already shown them the finished house. There's nothing to compare it to.
- 03
Email follow-ups actually get opened.
"Here's what your new roof would look like" beats a PDF quote every single time. Nobody opens "Quote #4471." Everybody opens a picture of their own house.
The follow-up
The subject line that always gets opened.
"Here's what your new roof would look like" beats a PDF quote every single time. Nobody opens Quote #4471. Everybody opens a picture of their own house.
One sentence. One image. One reply that comes back saying "let's do it."
Here's what your new roof would look like
Hey Mark, here's the render of your place with the architectural shingle we talked about yesterday.

Want me to swing by Saturday to lock it in?
— Jake
Let's talk
See how it'd work for your crew.
Leave your name and either an email or a phone number — whatever's easier. We'll reach out the same way to talk pricing, how it fits a day on the road, and the roof options your guys would have on tap.
No deck. No pressure. Just a real conversation — quick email back or a short call, your call. If it's a fit, we'll get you set up. If not, no hard feelings.
— the team
Before you ask
The five questions every contractor asks.
Do I need to install software?+
No. You get a private portal in any browser, already loaded with the exact roof options your crew sells. Take the photo on your phone or tablet, upload it, pick the options, hit render. Nothing to install on a single device.
How realistic are the renders?+
Photo-realistic. The whole point is that the homeowner doesn't realize it's a render. They think it's a real photo of what their house will look like.
What roof types can you render?+
Asphalt shingles, metal standing seam, slate, clay and concrete tile, cedar shake, synthetic. Most colors. If you sell it, we can render it.
What does it cost after the demo?+
Per-render, scales down hard with volume. Most contractors pay it back with one extra job a month. We'll walk through pricing on the demo.
Will the homeowner know it's a render?+
Only if you tell them. We label it as a visualization for trust, but most contractors just say "here's what the new roof will look like," because it does.