What we built in 24 hours: the Quotrr launch sprint
Today we put the public face of Quotrr online. Not a teaser page, the real thing: pages a person can read, pages an AI agent can read, a way to sign up, and a customer portal that works. Here is what went out and why, told straight.
The public site
Every page is a real, crawlable URL, not a JavaScript shell that a search engine has to guess at. There are landing pages for contractors and for homeowners, a features page, pricing, how it works, a tour, and an about page that does not oversell. There are honest comparison pages against Jobber, Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan, and Thumbtack, and trade pages for pools, landscape, roofing, and HVAC. The comparisons name where the other tool wins, because a comparison that only flatters us is not worth reading.
The funnel
Before today, the calls to action pointed at the pricing page and stopped. Now there is a real signup form for contractors, a waitlist for homeowners in trades and cities we have not opened, and a welcome checklist that tracks your first-run setup against your real account. The form works without JavaScript and gets better with it.
The customer portal
A homeowner can open a proposal from a link, sign it, and follow the whole job on a live timeline, with no app to install and no password to set. The link signs them in. The portal reads the same record the contractor sees, so there is one source of truth, not two copies drifting apart.
The agent surface
Homeowners are starting to ask AI agents what a job should cost and who to hire. Rather than make those agents scrape us, we published a clean surface: a plain-text map at llms.txt, a discovery file at the well-known path, and a documented consent model. Anonymized price reads are free. Anything done for a person needs a scoped, expiring token that person signed. We log every agent query.
Why a day
Because the point of Quotrr is that the work compounds, and the same is true of the tool. Ship the honest version, watch what real contractors do with it, fix what breaks. We would rather have a real site up and learn from it than polish a private demo for another month. The changelog has the full list of what landed.
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