Public signals that point to jobs worth checking.
I turn public storm, permit, and inspection records into short lead packets: where to look, why it may matter, and what follow-up route to run.
Not a scraped homeowner list. Not a dashboard. Just a tight list of public signals, why they matter, and the practical follow-up angle.
Sample packet
Tulsa roofing follow-up zones
Demand zone
Tulsa / Turley
Public storm record says many homes were damaged, with estimated 100–110 mph winds.
Follow-up angle: summer reinspection or canvassing route.
Property angle
North Tulsa / Gilcrease
Record mentions home damage and roof damage to an apartment complex.
Follow-up angle: property-manager or reinspection review.
Route signal
Oneta / Wagoner
Record says roofs of numerous homes were damaged.
Follow-up angle: focused inspection route, not a generic hail map.
What you get
A lead packet an owner can actually use.
Each packet is built from public sources and written in contractor language: where to look, what happened, why it may matter now, and what to do next.
Area or entity
The neighborhood, address cluster, business, property, or route worth reviewing.
Observed signal
The exact public clue: storm damage note, permit, inspection, complaint, review pattern, or quote request.
Source receipt
Where the signal came from, with enough detail to sanity-check it before acting.
Suggested angle
Inspection route, recheck zone, property-manager angle, quote follow-up, or service timing cue.
Honest limits
Clear labels for demand-zone signals versus named leads. No fake certainty.
Outreach-ready summary
Plain-English bullets your team can use without decoding a spreadsheet swamp.
Public-source signals
Useful clues hiding in boring places.
Most contractors do not need another dashboard. They need someone to turn public noise into a short list worth checking this week.
Roofing / restoration
Storm damage records
Public storm reports can reveal damaged-home zones, apartment-complex angles, and reinspection routes.
Pools / HVAC / trades
Permits and inspections
Open permits, finals, and inspection timing can point to route density, replacement windows, and follow-up zones.
Local services
Requests and weak spots
Public recommendation requests, review patterns, and competitor gaps can expose places worth following up.
Best fit
Built for lead-driven local contractors.
What this is not
Not guaranteed leads.
- Not a private homeowner contact list.
- Not a generic SEO audit or AI pitch.
- Not a CRM, dashboard, or long-term contract setup.
- Just public signals translated into useful follow-up opportunities.
Sample packet
Want to see what I would find for your market?
Send your trade and city. I’ll reply with whether there are enough public signals to build a small useful sample.
Reviewed by Will, not a lead broker. I use public sources, label uncertainty, and keep the first packet small enough to judge quickly.
FAQ
The obvious questions.
Is this a list of homeowner names?
No. Some packet types may include named public entities like businesses, properties, permits, or posted requests. Storm and weather packets are usually demand-zone signals, not homeowner contact lists.
Where does the data come from?
Public sources: municipal permits and inspections, storm records, public recommendation requests, business listings, review patterns, and other sources that can be checked without logging into private accounts.
Is this an SEO audit?
No. This is about finding public buying signals and follow-up opportunities your team can sanity-check, not grading your website or selling SEO.
Are you using AI?
AI may help organize public records and draft summaries, but the packet is reviewed before it is sent. The value is the source-backed signal and practical follow-up angle.
What do I get first?
Usually a small sample: a few rows with location or entity, public signal, source receipt, why it may matter, and a suggested follow-up angle.
What happens after the sample?
If it is useful, we can talk about a paid weekly or one-off packet for your trade and market. If it is not useful, you can ignore it. Beautifully low drama.