Skip to content
AvidraAvidra
  • Home
  • Pricing
  • How it works
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact
Sign inStart free
AVIDRA

Every call answered.

AI-assisted missed-call recovery for local service businesses.

Product

  • Pricing
  • How it works
  • Features
  • Compare
  • Blog
  • System status

Industries

  • Dental
  • Electrical
  • Garage door
  • HVAC
  • Locksmith
  • Med spa
  • Plumbing
  • Roofing

Company

  • About
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Book a demo
  • Sign in

Legal

  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Security
  • Refunds
  • Cookies
  • SMS policy
  • DPA
  • Acceptable use
  • Accessibility
  • Do not sell my info

© 2026 Avidra™. Avidra™ and Hypnics™ are trademarks of Hypnics. All rights reserved.

Avidra is a product of Hypnics. Pickering, ON, L1X 0G2, Canada.

UPTIME 99.9% · 4.2s avg · WORKS WITH YOUR NUMBER

Comparison · Voicemail

Avidra vs Voicemail

Phone rings first·4.2s response·30-day guarantee
Fetched 2026-05-17

The promise

If Avidra doesn't recover 3 booked jobs in your first 30 days, I refund everything and disconnect you myself.

No forms. No retention call. No retainer.

Asad, founder

A homeowner with a leaking water heater Googles "plumber near me" at 9:47pm on a Tuesday. They tap your number, listen to your name in your own recorded voice, hear the beep, and hang up. They don't leave a message. Nobody who's panicking about a flooded basement does. They scroll back to the search results and call the next number.

That's the part of voicemail nobody who's never run a service business understands. Voicemail isn't the catch. Voicemail is where the lead goes to die.

The short answer

Stick with voicemail if your business mostly comes through referrals and the phone is a backup channel. You'll lose a few cold inbound leads. The volume is too low to care about.

Don't stick with voicemail if new customers find you through Google, Facebook, or your truck. Missed calls are how your spend gets wasted. You need something that picks up, even imperfectly, even just for the first thirty seconds.

What you're actually comparing

Voicemail is the carrier's default fallback. The phone rings four to six times, the call rolls to a recording, the caller decides whether to leave a message, and most of them don't. The recording lands in a system you may or may not check the next time you're in the truck. There's no automatic text back, no calendar booking, no transcript that gets read out loud while you're driving.

Avidra is the layer underneath the ring. The phone still rings on your line first. If you pick up, nothing changes. If you don't, Avidra answers within a few seconds, asks the caller four to five questions over SMS or voice, and drops a captured lead into your dashboard.

The comparison isn't really product-to-product. It's "leave money on the floor" vs "pick the money up." Most owners default to voicemail because nobody told them there was a third option that didn't cost a salary.

Why voicemail kills service leads

Three things are true about service callers that voicemail doesn't account for.

First, they're under pressure. A pipe is leaking in the basement and they can hear it. Or it's 4pm in July and the AC quit with two kids home from school. They're not in the mood to leave a measured message about their preferred callback window. They want a human, or the next-best thing, right now.

Second, they're shopping. Google Maps gives them five or six numbers in a row. They will not wait. The roofer who picks up first, or who at least sends a text back inside a minute, wins the job. The one whose voicemail says "leave a message and we'll get back to you" gets nothing.

Third, they don't trust voicemail. Half the time they assume nobody checks it. They're not entirely wrong. Most owners are doing the work, not sitting at a desk dialing voicemails back.

The result you'll see in your own phone log is the gap between missed calls and voicemails left. Look at the inbound history on your business line for last month. Count the missed calls. Count the voicemails. The difference is the leak voicemail can't catch, because hangups don't leave a recording.

Feature comparison

FeatureAvidraVoicemail
Picks up missed calls 24/7
YesYes (recording only)
Caller leaves a usable lead
Yes, structuredMaybe, if they speak
Texts the caller back automatically
Yes, under 5 secNo
Captures name, address, job
Yes, over SMSOnly what they say
Notifies you on your phone
Push or SMSStandard voicemail icon
Transcription of the message
Yes, plus structured fieldsCarrier-dependent
Books the job
Yes (when calendar connected)No
Screens spam
YesNo
Caller has to leave a message
NoYes
Cost
Flat monthlyFree with carrier
Setup
Same dayAlready on

Where voicemail still wins

Voicemail is free and already on every phone in the country. No new system to learn or monthly bill to add. For a shop that does maybe 5 inbound calls a week, most of which are existing customers who'll leave a message because they know you, voicemail is genuinely fine.

It's also the right answer for one-person operations where the phone isn't really the channel. You get jobs through your buddy at the supply house, two HOAs you've worked with for a decade, and one realtor who keeps referring you. Cold inbound is not how you grow. In that case, paying for missed-call recovery is paying to fix a leak that isn't there.

The other voicemail-wins case: highly regulated voicemail compliance. Some healthcare and legal contexts have specific rules about what can and can't be in an automated text reply to an inbound caller. If you're in that bucket, you already know it, and voicemail's neutrality is a feature, not a bug.

Where Avidra wins

If a noticeable share of your work comes from people who clicked your number from Google or a Facebook ad, voicemail is bleeding you. Those clicks cost you money to earn. You paid for them. Missing the call is paying twice, once to get the click, once to lose the job.

Avidra answers the call. Then it sends a text in the homeowner's hand within five seconds, in language a person would actually use. "Hey, this is Avidra answering for Mike's Plumbing. He's on a job. Want to tell me what's going on?" A homeowner who already typed "plumber near me" into Google is in a tab they can answer with their thumb. A homeowner staring at the voicemail icon is in an app they have to consciously open.

You also get a record. Not a hard-to-listen-to recording, an actual log. Name, address, job, urgency, all in a row, on your phone, while you're still in the truck. You can look at it during your lunch break and call back the three that actually need a call. The other twelve already got their question answered by text.

Pricing reality check

Pricing as of 2026-05-17

Voicemail itself is free. The cost shows up in the leads it loses.

The math you can run yourself in five minutes: open your Google Ads cost-per-click for your top service keyword. Open your phone log for last month. Count the missed calls. Multiply the cost-per-click by the number of missed calls that came from search clicks. That's the ad spend you paid for and lost the moment the call rang out. Avidra at flat pricing pays for itself if it captures even a handful of those.

Check Voicemail's site for current rates.

Run that math on your own numbers. Most owners haven't, because nobody's been logging it. The result tends to surprise them.

Who should pick which

A one-truck handyman in a small town. Most jobs are repeat customers and referrals. Phone barely matters as a new-business channel. Voicemail is correct. Save the subscription money.

A two-truck plumbing shop in a competitive metro running Google Ads. New customer cost is real and measurable. Even a 10-percent improvement in answered calls earns out the Avidra subscription multiple times over. Avidra is correct.

An HVAC shop with a website but no advertising. Inbound is moderate, most from Google Maps profile views. About a third of calls go to voicemail in busy weeks. The shop owner thinks the voicemail catches enough of them, but the voicemail history shows 4 messages a month against a phone log that shows 30 missed calls. Avidra is correct. The leak is bigger than the voicemail makes it look.

A solo electrician doing residential service in a small market. Three inbound calls a day, almost all from a steady set of contractors. Voicemail is fine. Adding a tool is friction without payoff.

FAQ

Doesn't voicemail at least get me a callback number?

Sometimes. Carriers usually log the inbound number even if the caller hangs up without speaking. Most owners don't dial those back, though, because they have no context. Is this a customer? A spammer? A salesperson? Without something more, the missed-call log gets ignored.

Can I just record a better voicemail greeting?

You can, and it helps a little. A 6-second greeting that says 'leave your address and the issue, I'll text you back inside 10 minutes' converts better than a generic one. It still loses to a tool that texts back automatically inside 5 seconds, because the homeowner has already started Googling the next plumber by the time they finish your greeting.

Will Avidra replace my voicemail box?

No. Voicemail still works for the rare caller who wants to leave a message. Avidra adds a layer on top of the ring. Most owners eventually stop checking the voicemail box because Avidra captures the same callers in a more useful format, but the box stays there.

What about my existing carrier voicemail with transcription?

Carrier transcription helps. It still has the same gap: the caller has to choose to leave a message in the first place. The biggest loss isn't bad transcription, it's the hangups before any audio gets recorded.

Is voicemail safer for privacy than an AI tool?

In some narrow regulated contexts, yes. For most plumbing, HVAC, electrical, roofing, dental, or med-spa shops, the privacy bar is the same as any other business tool you already use. Avidra doesn't share caller data outside your account.

Stop sending leads to voicemail.

Most missed calls never leave a message. Avidra answers in the homeowner's hand inside 5 seconds. 14-day free trial. If it doesn't catch jobs you would have lost, walk away.

Start free for 14 days
Works when you're under a sink
Yes
Technically yes, practically no