The quiet cost of the no-access visit, and how to get it back

bookings
  • Business Development & Marketing

Every week, across the UK, surveyors and compliance teams are burning money on doors that
never open.

It does not show up as a line on a P&L. It shows up as fuel bills, wasted mornings, missed
targets, and the slow creep of jobs that never quite get done on time.

Here is what that really costs, what to do about it, and the platform we have built to fix it.

The money you are losing right now

A standalone gas safety check in the UK costs somewhere between £60 and £100 to deliver.
Price Your Job puts the national average at £75. Every failed access burns that figure. No
certificate. No compliance progress. Just a rebook and a diesel bill.

Most contractors and teams sit at a no-access rate of 15 to 25%. That means one in four or one
in five visits you are paying for today is a loss.

For an independent contractor running 20 visits a week, a 20% no-access rate is £300 a
week, gone. Over a year, that is roughly £15,000 of revenue you already paid to generate
and never got back. That is before you count the admin hours spent rescheduling, the fuel,
and the jobs you had to turn down because your diary was clogged with reattempts.

For a housing compliance team the numbers get ugly fast. Platform Housing Group, which
manages 49,000 homes, was losing over £300,000 a year to no-access before automating their
booking layer. South Tyneside Homes had gas contractors hitting 30 to 40 no-answers a day
before they switched systems. That is not inefficient. That is a structural hole in how tenant
appointments are being made.

The solution, and why it actually works

The fix is not more phone calls. It is not a good letter. It is meeting tenants on the channel they
actually use.

Text messages have a 98% open rate, with 90% read within three minutes. Email sits at 20 to
30%. Around 80% of people don’t answer the phone to a number they don’t recognise. Letters
are the worst of the three.

When a two-way SMS agent handles the conversation, the structure of the workday changes.
Within minutes of the booking being created, the tenant either confirms, replies to reschedule, or
gets a follow-up 48 hours later. By the time the van leaves the yard, the route is built from
confirmed visits only.

The sector results are clear. Platform Housing Group reported a 24% reduction in no-access
rates inside four months, a 100% gas compliance rate, and over £314,500 in annual
savings after moving to automated SMS booking. South Tyneside Homes went from four
appointments booked per day via manual phone calls to 150 per day once the SMS layer took
the load.

Applied to an independent contractor running 20 visits a week, that 24% no-access reduction is
worth £300 to £450 a week in recovered productive time. Across a year that is the difference
between hiring help and not.

What BookFlo is

BookFlo is a UK platform that automates tenant appointment booking and communication for
the property compliance sector. It is built for two audiences:

Independent contractors — gas engineers, EPC assessors, electricians, stock condition
surveyors — who want to stop losing visits, stop chasing tenants by phone, and start their week
with a diary full of confirmed appointments, without having to do any admin.

Housing associations and compliance teams — who need a scalable, auditable way to
reduce no-access, hit statutory compliance deadlines, and create a documented evidence trail
for Awaab’s Law and wider regulatory scrutiny.

At the centre of the product is an agent called Sophie. She handles the two-way SMS
conversation with the tenant. She sends the initial appointment. She answers questions about
access, times, and reschedules. She writes the confirmed booking back into the contractor’s
calendar.

You upload your job list. Sophie manages the conversation. Your team turns up to confirmed
visits.

There is no 6-week implementation. No housing management system integration required. No
procurement process. A solo contractor can be sending bookings on the same day they sign up.
A housing team can run a pilot on a single stock before rolling out wider.

The platform is UK-hosted, with a full exportable audit trail on every tenant conversation, there

is no more guess work on whether the tenant did or did not book in as it is all in front off you

Where to go next

If you are an individual contractor, start a trial at book-flo.com and have your first SMS bookings
going out this week.

If you run a compliance team or housing operation, we can arrange a pilot on a controlled stock
so you can see the numbers against your own baseline before committing further.

Thanks to Nina and the Surveyors UK community for this space.

BookFlo

BookFlo

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