GLOSSARY

What is a Dispatcher?

Direct Answer

A dispatcher coordinates service appointments, assigns jobs to technicians or drivers, communicates with customers, and keeps field operations running. Dispatchers are common in trucking, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, locksmith, and broader home-services industries.

In more detail

A home-services dispatcher manages the daily schedule, routing techs efficiently between jobs, handling emergency add-ins, and communicating ETAs to customers. A trucking dispatcher handles load assignments, driver hours-of-service compliance, route optimization, and shipper/receiver coordination. Both rely heavily on scheduling software and real-time messaging.

BLS data (SOC 43-5032 Dispatchers Except Police, Fire, Ambulance) places median pay roughly $40,000-$50,000. Offshore dispatchers through managed staffing providers typically cost $1,200-$2,000 per month for US-hours coverage with industry-specific training.

What a dispatcher does

  • Schedule daily jobs across technicians or drivers.
  • Communicate arrival windows and updates to customers.
  • Re-route in real time for cancellations or emergencies.
  • Handle inbound service calls and triage priority.
  • Coordinate with parts, warehouse, or loading teams.

Related terms

Common follow-up questions

Can dispatch be done remotely?

Yes. Most modern dispatch software (ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, FieldEdge, McLeod) is cloud-based, allowing dispatchers to work anywhere with a stable internet connection.

What software do dispatchers use?

Home services: ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, FieldEdge, Jobber. Trucking: McLeod, TMW, DAT, Samsara.

How many techs can one dispatcher handle?

Typically 10-20 techs or drivers per dispatcher depending on job complexity, ticket length, and customer-communication load.

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