Our AI automation platform deploys remotely to roofing and restoration contractors across the U.S. — Ohio, Texas, Colorado, Tennessee, Georgia, and all 50 states. No geographic limits. Full deployment in 60 days.
Book a Demo →The entire platform deploys remotely. We configure your system, connect your software, and build your voice agent from Milwaukee — you just show up to your onboarding call and use the product.
We built the Storm Trigger Engine for the highest-volume storm markets — Dallas, Columbus, Denver, Nashville, Atlanta, and the full Midwest corridor. These are where roofing and restoration contractors face the highest supplement opportunity and where our AI voice agent for roofing companies pays for itself fastest.
The claims contracting industry covers a wide range of businesses — all of them dealing with the same fundamental challenge: navigating insurance carriers to get paid fairly for the work they do. Chosen Local was built specifically for this industry, which means every feature maps to a real problem these businesses face every day.
Whether you run a roofing company doing 10 jobs a month or a restoration company handling 50 active claims at once, the platform scales to your volume. The supplement service works the same either way — you send the jobs, we write the supplements.
Storm damage roofing contractors in Texas, Ohio, Colorado, and across the Midwest storm corridor have the highest supplement opportunity. We know exactly what carriers try to exclude on roof claims and how to write for every line item they miss. Drip edge, decking percentages, step flashing, O&P — none of it gets left out.
Water, fire, mold, and biohazard restoration involves complex multi-trade scopes that carriers routinely underpay. Our AI receptionist for restoration contractors handles inbound calls 24/7, while the platform manages documentation intake, supplement tracking, and automated carrier follow-up sequences.
Public adjusters manage high claim volumes with lean teams. Our platform's financial dashboard gives you a real-time view of every open claim, what's owed, and what's stuck — so you always know exactly where to apply pressure. The supplement service handles the Xactimate work so your team focuses on advocacy and negotiation.
Claims contractors across the U.S. — from Texas storm corridors to Florida hurricane zones to Midwest hail markets — all receive the same fully configured platform. Geography doesn't change what the platform does or how fast it's delivered.
The United States now experiences between $8 and $15 billion in hail-related property losses annually (CAPE Analytics, citing NOAA data), concentrated in a geographic band running from Texas and Oklahoma through Kansas, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio — commonly called "Hail Alley" by meteorologists and the insurance industry. Contractors operating in these markets experience storm-driven revenue spikes three to five times their baseline volume during active weather seasons from March through October. The operational challenges of managing that volume surge — missed calls, document chaos, unpaid supplements, uncollected holdbacks — are amplified by the sheer number of jobs being run simultaneously.
Chosen Local was built for contractors in these markets. The Storm Trigger Engine, the AI voice agent's surge handling, the document automation system, and the financial tracking module were all designed around the operational reality of running thirty, fifty, or one hundred claims jobs simultaneously during an active storm season. The platform scales with the contractor's volume — whether they are running five jobs or five hundred, the automations work identically.
Texas leads the nation in hail claims volume, with the DFW Metroplex, Houston, San Antonio, and Austin metro areas each generating thousands of insurance claims annually. The State Farm alone paid $1.4 billion in Texas hail claims in 2025 (State Farm newsroom, April 2026), with total industry-wide losses significantly higher. Contractors serving the Texas market need storm surge call handling and rapid canvassing list generation — both core capabilities of the Chosen Local platform.
Oklahoma City and Tulsa regularly appear in NOAA's list of most-hail-damaged cities. Oklahoma averages 45 hail events per year (NOAA), creating consistent insurance claim volume for roofing and restoration contractors throughout the storm season from April through September.
Denver and the Front Range communities experience some of the most damaging hail events in the country, with golf ball-sized hail documented multiple times per decade. Colorado's high elevation and severe convective storm patterns make it one of the most active supplement markets in the nation — high-value hail damage on expensive properties creates significant supplement recovery opportunity.
The Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Dayton metro areas each generate significant roofing and restoration claim volume from spring and summer storm events. Ohio's high density of residential properties combined with active storm seasons makes it a top-five state for roofing contractor insurance claim revenue per square mile of service area.
The Southeast corridor from Nashville through Atlanta generates consistent insurance claim volume from severe thunderstorm, tornado, and wind events year-round. Restoration contractors in Tennessee and Georgia serve markets that experience water damage, fire damage, and storm damage across all four seasons — making year-round platform utilization the norm rather than the exception.
Florida's hurricane season creates concentrated, high-volume claim events — the state's revised wind codes after Hurricane Ian are accelerating early roof replacements (Mordor Intelligence, 2026) — that can generate more insurance claims in a single week than most states see in an entire year. Chosen Local's storm surge handling capability was specifically tested against hurricane-event call volumes. Florida also has specific Miami-Dade code requirements and wind mitigation supplement opportunities that our specialists are trained on.
Chosen Local serves roofing contractors, restoration companies, and public adjusters in all fifty US states. High-activity markets outside the primary storm corridor — including Arizona (monsoon season), the Mid-Atlantic (hurricane and nor'easter events), and the Pacific Northwest (wind and water damage) — are also well-served by the platform's feature set. Remote deployment means geographic location has no bearing on the quality or completeness of the platform deployment.
Every Chosen Local deployment is completed entirely remotely. There are no on-site visits, no regional availability restrictions, and no requirement for the contractor or their staff to travel to a training facility. The entire deployment process — from kick-off to go-live — happens via video calls, secure credential sharing, and remote system configuration.
The kick-off call is a ninety-minute video session covering the contractor's specific services, service area, target customer profile, current pain points, and platform configuration preferences. We collect the information we need to configure the voice agent, set up document templates, and define the automation rules that will govern the platform. The contractor does not need any technical knowledge for this call — it is a business conversation, not a technical one.
After kick-off, the Chosen Local team handles all technical setup — connecting QuickBooks Online, configuring Google Drive, setting up the Twilio phone number, writing and testing the voice agent script, building the automation workflows, and configuring the document classification system. The contractor provides API credentials and access permissions; we handle every technical step from that point forward.
Quality assurance testing runs for one to two weeks after the technical build is complete. We place test calls, submit test documents, run test automations, and verify every workflow against the contractor's actual job data before going live. The contractor participates in a final walkthrough call before launch to confirm they are satisfied with every feature. Monthly billing begins thirty days after the go-live date — not at contract signing.
Chosen Local currently serves contractors operating within the United States only. The platform is designed around US insurance carriers, US building codes, and US contractor licensing frameworks. International deployment is not available at this time.
Standard deployment takes up to 60 days from contract signing to go-live. Most deployments are completed in 40 to 50 days. The timeline depends on the complexity of the contractor's operation, how quickly credentials and access permissions are provided, and QA testing duration. Rush deployments may be available for contractors with time-sensitive needs.
Multi-state operations are supported. The voice agent can be configured with multiple service area rules, the Storm Trigger Engine monitors all service area zip codes simultaneously, and the document system handles state-specific code requirements automatically based on the property address. Contractors operating across multiple states or regions are welcome — discuss your specific setup on your demo call.
Three tools are required before deployment begins: Google Workspace (for Google Drive document intake and Gmail communication), QuickBooks Online (not QuickBooks Desktop — the platform uses the QBO cloud API), and DocuSign (for lien waivers, AOBs, and certificate of completion routing). A portable business phone number that can be moved to Twilio is also required for the voice agent. If any of these are not in place, Chosen Local can advise on setup during the kick-off process.
Reach out and tell us where you operate. We'll confirm your service area setup and get the conversation started.
Book a Demo →Internal data note: Statistics labeled "Chosen Local data" or "Chosen Local analysis" are based on Chosen Local's observations across client engagements and supplement service submissions and are not independently verified by a third party. Statistics labeled "industry estimate" reflect commonly cited figures in the roofing and insurance claims industry without a single definitive primary source.