By Jesse Fowler, Founder of J&J Renovations and J&J Plumbing Services
There is an old rule in the trades. The first contractor to get a quote back wins the job about 78% of the time. Speed beats price. Speed beats reputation. Speed wins.
Now imagine one plumber can generate a detailed, accurate quote in three minutes while another takes three days. Multiply that across every lead, every week, for a year. That gap is no longer hypothetical. AI-powered quoting tools are creating it right now, and the trades industry is splitting into two tiers because of it.
The quoting bottleneck has always been the problem
Australian tradies spend an average of 14 hours per week on quoting and admin. One in four has turned down jobs because they were buried in paperwork. That adds up to roughly $120,000 per year in missed work per business.
For decades, quoting has been manual. You visit the site, measure everything, check supplier pricing, calculate labour, build a margin, and type it into a template. A detailed renovation quote can take a full day. Meanwhile, the homeowner is collecting quotes from your competitors too.
This is changing fast. Platforms like Buildxact now use AI to generate full estimates from a PDF plan in seconds. Their users complete estimates seven times faster than manual methods and produce 56% more quotes in their first year. ServiceM8 has added AI quoting for Australian tradies. Jobber uses historical job data to draft quotes automatically. In the US, ServiceTitan’s AI tools help contractors close 12% more jobs with 13% higher average tickets.
These tools do not replace the tradesperson’s judgment. They handle the repetitive calculation work so the operator can focus on what matters: assessing the site, talking to the customer, and getting back to them first.
The gap between adopters and holdouts is widening
Construction remains one of the least digitised industries on earth. McKinsey has called it the second-worst performer globally for technology adoption. Labour productivity in the sector has averaged just 1% annual growth over two decades, compared with 3.6% for manufacturing.
However, the businesses that do adopt are pulling ahead quickly. A 2025 Autodesk and Deloitte report found that 37% of Australian construction businesses now use AI or machine learning, up from 26% in 2023. Each additional technology a business adopts correlates with a $1.14 million revenue uplift for a $100 million firm. And 96% of businesses that had invested in digitisation reported measurable improvements.
On the other side, the numbers are grim. In the 12 months to March 2025, 2,636 Australian construction companies became insolvent. That represents a 23% year-over-year increase. Poor internal controls, thin margins, and financial illiteracy among directors are consistently cited as underlying causes. These are exactly the problems that digital quoting and job management tools address.
Nobody is saying a quoting app prevents insolvency on its own. But a business that quotes faster, prices more accurately, and closes more jobs has a fundamentally different financial profile than one doing everything by hand.
Why fintech should care about a plumber’s quote
Here is the part that matters for the finance industry. When a quote moves from a handwritten number on an invoice to a structured digital document, it becomes something financial services can work with.
A digital quote contains materials, labour rates, supplier pricing, project scope, timeline, and risk factors. That is underwriting data. When Wisetack embeds financing into a contractor’s quoting software, financed jobs come in 4.5 times larger than non-financed jobs. Close rates jump by 11 percentage points when contractors offer payment plans at the point of quote.
ServiceTitan built its entire embedded finance strategy on this insight. It went public in December 2024 at an $8.9 billion valuation, and roughly a third of its revenue now comes from financial products rather than software subscriptions. Housecall Pro appointed a Chief Fintech Officer and built a full financial stack with Stripe covering payments, business lending, and expense cards.
The playbook is the same one that turned Toast and Shopify into fintech companies. Own the workflow, capture the data, embed the financial products. Trades is simply the next vertical.
Australia does not yet have a broad home services embedded finance platform. Brighte has approved over $500 million in financing, but focuses on solar and energy. The quote-to-finance bridge that Wisetack built in the US does not exist here yet. For a market with nearly 463,000 construction businesses and over $100 billion in annual residential construction value, that is a significant gap.
The bottom line
AI quoting tools are not going to replace tradespeople. A plumber still needs to crawl under the house. A builder still needs to read the site. But the business side of trades is being automated whether operators like it or not.
The businesses that adopt will quote faster, price tighter, close more, and plug into a growing ecosystem of embedded financial products. The businesses that do not will keep losing leads to the first quote that lands in the customer’s inbox.
Fintech companies looking for the next underserved vertical should pay close attention. The trades industry spent decades resisting digitisation. That resistance is breaking, and a $12 trillion global industry is on the other side.
Jesse Fowler is the founder of J&J Plumbing Services and J&J Renovations, serving the ACT and surrounding NSW regions.
