Sales pages promise 10x ROI in 30 days. Reality is messier. Here's what year-one actually looks like for a roofing company that implements a CRM well — not just buys one.
Months 1-3: The investment phase
First 90 days you're loading data, training reps, building automations. Don't expect a flood of new revenue. Expect maybe 10 to 15 percent close-rate lift from response-time improvements alone. Cost: roughly $1,000 in software plus 20 to 40 hours of owner time.
Months 4-6: The compounding phase
Automations are running, follow-ups are firing, reviews are stacking. Close rate climbs another 10 to 15 percent. Lead-source tracking starts revealing which channels actually pay — usually one of three big surprises (often: 'Facebook is doubling Google Ads, who knew').
Months 7-12: The real return
This is where the math gets serious. Average roofing company with a clean implementation seeing:
- →Close rate up 35 to 45 percent from baseline
- →15 to 25 extra signed contracts per quarter
- →$180K to $400K incremental revenue
- →Review count up five to ten times
What the ROI actually looks like
For a roofer doing $2M baseline, year-one CRM contribution is typically $300K to $600K incremental. Software cost is $4K to $6K. Even at the conservative end, that's a 50x return. The aggressive end is 100x or higher.
Why some roofers see nothing
The CRM doesn't fail — the implementation does. Companies that see zero ROI share three traits: the owner didn't use it, no follow-up automations were ever turned on, and reps weren't held accountable to logging activity. The tool is leverage. Without weight on the lever, nothing moves.
A roofing CRM doesn't grow your business. It removes the ceiling on the growth you already have.