Field service management
software, explained.
The category was built for shops with dispatchers and back offices, then priced per seat. Most of the small crews paying for it use a third of it.
What it actually is
Field service management software, FSM if you are reading vendor sites, runs the loop of a service business: a lead becomes a quote, the quote becomes a scheduled job, the job lands on a dispatch board and gets assigned to a tech, the tech does the work and documents it, an invoice fires on a trigger, payment gets collected, and a review request goes out. Jobber, Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan, Workiz, and ServiceM8 all sell some version of that loop. The differences are which half of the loop they are best at, and how the bill scales.
What a small crew actually needs
If you run one to five people, your day does not have a dispatcher in it. The bottleneck is almost never assigning techs to a board. It is the front half of the loop:
- Getting the quote out the same day you saw the job, because speed wins work.
- Follow-up that actually happens. Deals close on the fifth, sixth, seventh touch, and nobody has time to send those by hand.
- A proposal the customer can say yes to on their phone, with e-sign and a deposit in the same motion.
- Invoicing and payment without re-entering anything.
- Reviews that build a record you own, not a profile a platform owns.
Dispatch boards, GPS fleet tracking, inventory, and payroll integrations are real needs, at 10-plus techs. Buying them at 2 techs means renting features you will not touch for years, usually with a per-seat meter attached.
Where the per-seat model bites
The headline price is for one user, or for a minimum bundle. The mechanics underneath are where small crews get caught. All numbers as published or reported, June 2026:
The pattern: hiring raises your software bill even when the new hand never opens the app. Per-seat pricing taxes growth. ServiceM8 is the honorable exception, charging per job instead of per user, though it gates features across five tiers. The head-to-head math lives on Quotrr vs Jobber, Quotrr vs Housecall Pro, and Quotrr vs ServiceTitan.
Where Quotrr fits, honestly
Quotrr is not a full FSM suite and does not pretend to be. It covers the front half of the loop, the part that decides whether you get the job at all:
- Quinn turns a voice note from the truck into a finished quote.
- Interactive proposals with good-better-best and live add-on toggles, e-sign plus deposit on one screen.
- A seven-touch follow-up cadence that runs itself.
- Invoicing, and reviews that come only from verified completed jobs, non-deletable, rolled into a public Quotrr Score.
- No seat fees on anything, and no AI credit metering. The core is free forever, and Pro is $12.99 a week, $39 a month, or $299 a year.
Dispatch and scheduling for multi-crew shops are coming in a flat-priced Business tier, flat because charging per truck is what the rest of the category does. If you need a deep dispatch board today, Jobber and Housecall Pro are the grown-up options, and the comparisons above say so plainly. If your trade is quote-heavy with recurring routes, like HVAC, irrigation, or electrical, the front half of the loop is where the money leaks, and that is the half Quotrr runs.
Common questions
What is field service management software?
Software that runs a service business's loop from lead to payment: a lead becomes a quote, the quote becomes a scheduled job, the job gets dispatched to a tech, the work gets done and documented, an invoice fires, payment gets collected, and a review request follows. Jobber, Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan, Workiz, and ServiceM8 are the common names.
What does field service software cost for a small crew?
Headline entry prices run $29 to $59 a month, but per-seat and per-tier mechanics move the real number. Jobber charges $29 per extra user, Housecall Pro reportedly $35 to $40 per added user on its top tier, Workiz reportedly starts near $225 for 3 users with extra users at $46 to $65, and ServiceTitan reportedly runs $245 to $500 per tech. All as published or reported, June 2026.
Does a 1 to 5 person crew need full field service management software?
Usually not all of it. A small crew needs fast quoting, follow-up that actually happens, e-sign with a deposit, invoicing, payment, and a review engine it owns. Dispatch boards, GPS fleets, and inventory modules are what 10-plus tech shops pay for. Buying the whole suite early means renting features you will not touch for years.
Is Quotrr field service management software?
Quotrr covers the front half of the loop: voice-note quoting, interactive proposals, seven-touch follow-up, e-sign plus deposit, invoicing, and verified reviews with a public Quotrr Score. It does not run a dispatch board or crew GPS today. A flat-priced Business tier with scheduling and dispatch is coming, and there are no seat fees on anything. See pricing.