Quotrr Start free

Blog Stories

When homeowners ask AI who to hire

By Phenomenal Pool & Landscape 6 min read

Something is changing in how a homeowner finds a contractor, and it is worth your attention even if it feels far off. People are starting to ask AI agents the questions they used to type into a search bar. What does it cost to replaster a pool. Who is good near me. Is this quote fair. The agent answers, and increasingly the homeowner acts on what it says.

What is actually happening

An AI agent does not browse the way a person does. It does not scroll your nicely designed site or watch your video. It reads structured information, weighs it, and gives the homeowner a short answer. If your business is not readable to that agent in a clean, machine-friendly form, you are not in the answer. You are not losing the comparison. You are not in it.

This is not a prediction about ten years out. Homeowners are doing it now, in small numbers, growing. The contractors who get ready early are the ones who show up when it is common.

What the agent is looking for

Put yourself in the agent's position. It wants to give the homeowner a trustworthy answer fast. So it favors information that is structured, verifiable, and not obviously gamed.

  • Prices it can read without guessing. A real range for a real job beats a vague call us for a quote.
  • Proof it can trust. A pile of star ratings anyone could buy is weak signal. A record of jobs that were completed, signed, photographed, and checked in on site is strong signal.
  • A clear way to know it is allowed to use your information, and on what terms.

Why fake reputation breaks here

The lead-app and bought-review world runs on volume and noise. An agent cuts through noise. It is built to find the most reliable answer, and inflated reviews are exactly the kind of thing it learns to discount. The reputation that wins in an agent-mediated world is the kind that is hard to fake, which is the kind Verified Outcomes and non-deletable Props were built to produce.

How Quotrr handles the agent

We built the surface for this on purpose. Quotrr publishes a machine-readable listing at llms.txt and a discovery file at the well-known agents path. Anonymized price reads are free, so an agent can answer what does this cost without anyone's data being exposed. Anything done for a specific person needs a scoped, expiring token that person signed. Every agent query is logged, and a contractor can opt out. The homeowner stays in control of their own information, and you stay in control of yours.

What does not change

Worth saying plainly so this does not read like panic. The work still wins. A good contractor with a clean, verifiable record was always going to beat a sloppy one, and that is more true in an agent-mediated world, not less. The agent shift does not replace doing good work. It raises the reward for being the contractor whose record holds up to a second look, and it lowers the payoff for the one who got by on volume and noise. If anything, it tilts the field back toward the people who actually do the job well, which is the right direction.

Why we are not nervous about it

A lot of contractors hear agent and picture being scraped, judged by a machine, and shut out of a system they did not sign up for. We understand the worry, and the answer is consent. There is a difference between being scraped, which happens to you, and being read on terms you set, which you control. Quotrr is built for the second. Anonymized price reads are free because no one's private data is in them. Anything tied to a specific person needs a scoped, expiring token that person signed. Every query is logged so you can see who asked what, and you can opt out. The agent does not get a back door. It gets a front door you hold the key to.

What to do about it

You do not need to become a software person. You need a clean, honest, verifiable record of your work in a place an agent can read. That is the bet behind Quotrr. The companion piece on getting ready is the agent-ready contractor.

More from the blog

Trade guides 7 min read

The questions to ask any contractor before you sign

A short, plain list of questions every homeowner should ask any contractor before signing a proposal, no matter the trade.

Stories 7 min read

The agent-ready contractor

A clean public record, verified outcomes, and a machine-readable listing with consent. How to get ready for an agent-mediated world.

Start free