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SKILL·2E65BD

vertical-home-services

avelikiy
Mis à jour 9 days ago
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Voir sur GitHub
Métaaiapidesign

À propos

Cette compétence fournit les connaissances essentielles du domaine pour développer des logiciels destinés aux métiers des services à domicile (CVC, plomberie, etc.), en garantissant que les spécifications reflètent les opérations réelles telles que les règles de dispatch et les modèles de tarification. Elle détaille les quatre produits fondamentaux pour ce créneau et les entités clés comme les grilles tarifaires et les devis multi-options. Utilisez-la pendant la phase de spécification pour éviter des conceptions naïves et rivaliser correctement avec les plateformes établies.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add avelikiy/great_cto -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/avelikiy/great_cto
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/avelikiy/great_cto.git ~/.claude/skills/vertical-home-services

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Home & field services — spec it like a trades shop runs

HVAC, plumbing, cleaning, landscaping. A crew of techs in trucks, jobs on site, money quoted at the kitchen table. A builder who models this as "appointments + invoices" ships something no contractor will use. This skill is the domain briefing so the spec is right before code starts.

1. Domain vocabulary (know these or look naive)

  • Price book — the master catalog of priced tasks ("replace 40-gal water heater = $1,850"). Pricing is looked up, not computed hourly.
  • Flat-rate vs T&M — flat-rate (one price from the price book, parts + labor bundled) is the norm in the trades. Time & materials (T&M, billed by the hour + parts) is the exception, used for diagnostics or open-ended jobs. Build for flat-rate first.
  • Dispatch board — the live grid of techs × time slots the office uses to assign and re-shuffle jobs through the day.
  • Truck roll — sending a tech to a site. Every truck roll has a real cost; minimizing wasted rolls is the whole game.
  • First-time fix rate — % of jobs completed on the first visit. The north-star ops metric. Low fix rate = repeat rolls = lost margin.
  • Callback — a return visit because the first fix failed. Tracked and hated; ties to warranty.
  • Membership / service agreement — recurring plan (e.g. 2 tune-ups/yr for $19/mo) that creates predictable revenue and priority booking. A core business model, not a loyalty gimmick.
  • Good-better-best — the quote presents 3 priced options (e.g. patch / replace / replace-with-upgrade). Standard sales technique; lifts ticket.
  • Dispatch fee / trip charge — flat fee just to show up, often waived if the job is booked.
  • After-hours / emergency rate — premium pricing for nights, weekends, holidays. Same price book, different multiplier.
  • GPS / route — tech locations and optimized drive order; drives the "tech is 12 min away" customer text.
  • Parts markup — parts billed above cost (often 2–3×); a margin lever, must be representable per line.

2. Non-obvious domain rules (what makes this vertical specific)

  • Pricing is a lookup, not arithmetic. The price comes off the price book at a flat rate. Hourly math is the rare path, not the default.
  • The quote IS the sales tool. It's presented on site, often on a tablet, and closed on the spot — interactive, branded, good-better-best, accept-and-pay. It is not a PDF emailed for later.
  • Techs work offline. Basements, mechanical rooms, rural sites — no signal. The field app must capture work, photos, and signatures offline and sync later. This is a hard requirement, not a nice-to-have.
  • Same-day dispatch is normal. Jobs get created, assigned, and re-shuffled within the same day; the board is a live, mutable thing.
  • Demand is seasonal and spiky. HVAC floods on the first heat wave / cold snap; landscaping is spring-loaded. Capacity and booking must absorb surge, not assume even flow.
  • Appointments are windows, not instants. Customers get "8am–12pm", not "8:00". Model an arrival window plus narrowing ("tech en route").
  • Recurring is first-class. Memberships, maintenance plans, seasonal visits — the schema has to express recurrence and renewal natively.

3. What a naive build gets wrong

  • Hourly pricing. Modeling jobs as hours × rate. The trades quote flat-rate off a price book; hourly is the edge case. Get this wrong and the product is unsellable.
  • No offline mode. Assuming the tech has signal. The most common job site is a basement. An online-only field app fails on day one.
  • Quote as static PDF. A read-only document instead of an interactive accept-to-pay surface with selectable options and a deposit button. The quote must close the sale, not describe it.
  • No good-better-best. A single price with no upsell tiers. Leaves margin on the table and feels foreign to anyone who's bought HVAC.
  • No membership / recurring model. Treating every job as one-off. Misses the predictable-revenue engine the whole business runs on.
  • Instant appointments. Booking a 9:00 slot when the trade works in windows. Sets a customer expectation the crew can't meet.

4. Must-model entities / fields (beyond generic CRUD)

Schema hints — keep these migration-friendly (see [[migration-ready-schema]]):

  • PriceBookItemcode, name, category, flat_rate, cost, parts_markup, and tier prices {good, better, best}; is_recurring flag for membership-eligible items. T&M items carry an hourly rate as the exception path.
  • Membership / ServiceAgreementplan, cadence (e.g. 2/yr), price, billing_interval, renewal_date, priority_flag, linked customer; generates scheduled visits.
  • Jobstatus (scheduled → dispatched → en_route → on_site → complete → callback), assigned_tech, arrival_window {start,end}, address, is_after_hours, first_time_fix flag, parent membership if recurring.
  • Quote — array of options[] (good/better/best), each with line items off the price book; selected_option, deposit_amount, deposit_paid, accepted_at, branding; an accept action that converts to a Job.
  • Tech / Crew — skills/licenses held, home base, working hours, current GPS, capacity.

5. Per-product notes (wedge + the one thing to get right)

  • dispatch (crud) — assign jobs to techs, optimize routes, live status board. Wedge: ServiceTitan is ~$300+/tech and enterprise-heavy; the wedge is a clean same-day board a 3–8 truck shop can actually run without an implementation consultant. Must get right: the board is live and mutable — jobs re-assign and re-window mid-day, with arrival windows (not instants) and tech status driving the customer "on the way" text.
  • quoting (marketplace-lite) — photo/form → priced branded quote → accept + pay deposit. Wedge: vs Jobber/Housecall, lean into the interactive accept-to-pay quote that closes on site. Must get right: good-better-best options priced off the price book, with a deposit step — the quote is the sales tool, not a PDF.
  • field-booking (booking) — customer self-books a slot, gets reminders/confirmations. Wedge: incumbents bury self-booking; expose a dead-simple homeowner booking page. Must get right: book into an arrival window against real crew capacity, then drive reminders and confirmations (consent + timing deferred to [[lifecycle-messaging]]).
  • reviews (crm) — request/route/publish reviews after each job. Wedge: automate the post-job review ask that shops do by hand. Must get right: fire the request on job completion (tied to the first-time-fix outcome, not a blind blast), route happy → public platforms, unhappy → private recovery; SMS/email mechanics via [[lifecycle-messaging]].

6. Compliance / regulatory touchpoints (light — pointers, not full treatments)

  • Trade licensing & permits — HVAC/plumbing/electrical work is licensed and often permit-pulled per jurisdiction. Don't model trade qualification; do let a Job/Tech carry a license/permit reference field so a regulated build can extend it.
  • TCPA (SMS reminders) — booking confirmations/reminders are SMS; consent, STOP/HELP, and quiet hours apply. Defer all messaging infra and consent design to [[lifecycle-messaging]] — just flag that reminders exist so it's speced in, not bolted on.
  • Deposits / payments — quotes take a deposit and jobs collect payment. Defer PCI scope, idempotency, and refund/dispute flow to the billing/payments layer — the spec only needs the deposit_amount / deposit_paid fields, not the processor design.

Output

When applied, the architect/pm carries these into ARCH-.md / PLAN-.md: the price-book-flat-rate pricing model, the offline field requirement, the window-based scheduling, the multi-option accept-to-pay quote, and the membership/recurring entity — and cross-references [[lifecycle-messaging]], [[migration-ready-schema]], and [[vertical-onboarding]] rather than re-deriving them.

Dépôt GitHub

avelikiy/great_cto
Chemin: skills/vertical-home-services
0
agentic-codingclaude-code-pluginclaude-code-skillsclaude-code-subagentscode-reviewcto
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the vertical-home-services skill?

vertical-home-services is a Claude Skill by avelikiy. Skills package instructions and resources that Claude loads on demand, so Claude can perform vertical-home-services-related tasks without extra prompting.

How do I install vertical-home-services?

Use the install commands on this page: add vertical-home-services to Claude Code as a plugin, or clone its repository into your skills directory, then restart Claude so it picks up the skill.

What category does vertical-home-services belong to?

vertical-home-services is in the Meta category, tagged ai, api and design.

Is vertical-home-services free to use?

Yes. vertical-home-services is listed on AIMCP and free to install. It runs inside Claude, so no separate service account is required to use the skill itself.

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