How to Dispatch Pest Control Jobs
Dispatching pest control jobs well is mostly about triage under pressure: recurring service routes and renewals slip through the cracks when scheduling lives on a clipboard. When a wasp nest or sudden infestation comes in, the dispatcher has seconds to decide who goes, in what order, and what the customer hears. This guide covers how to dispatch pest control jobs so the urgent work moves first and nobody sits idle.
The Process
Triage by urgency and value
Sort incoming work so a wasp nest or sudden infestation pages the on-call tech immediately, while routine requests flow into the normal queue. Not every job is an emergency, and treating them all the same buries the ones that are.
Assign by location and skill
Send the nearest qualified tech, not just the next free one. For a $480 annual service plan, the right specialist on the first visit avoids a costly callback.
Keep the customer in the loop
An automatic "tech en route" text with an ETA cuts the anxious where-are-you calls that tie up the office.
Track status in one place
Every pest control operator should see, at a glance, which jobs are assigned, en route, on-site, and done — so the next dispatch decision is made on real status, not guesswork.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- !Dispatching from memory or a group text, so a wasp nest or sudden infestation slips while everyone assumes someone else has it.
- !Overloading your best tech because they're fastest, then watching the rest of the board stall.
Key takeaways
- For pest control operators, recurring service routes and renewals slip through the cracks when scheduling lives on a clipboard — and dispatch software is where it shows up most.
- Handle a wasp nest or sudden infestation first: it converts fastest and tolerates the least delay.
- Automate dispatch software so spring and summer demand doesn't bury the office.
Let SalesButler Do It For You
SalesButler scores each lead by urgency and pushes a wasp nest or sudden infestation straight to the on-call tech, with live status and automatic ETA texts — so the dispatcher stops juggling and starts directing.
Frequently Asked
How should a pest control operator prioritize emergency dispatches?
Flag urgency on intake so jobs like "a wasp nest or sudden infestation" auto-route to the on-call tech ahead of routine work, with the customer texted an ETA.
Do I need separate dispatch software?
If you're dispatching from texts and phone calls, a shared board pays for itself the first week — it ends double-dispatches and lost jobs.