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Repair lane

Symptom-first repair routing for the stressed buyer.

This page prototype is built to cut friction for homeowners who are already in breakdown mode. The layout keeps the next step obvious before the buyer falls into comparison paralysis.

Emergency response framing

Urgent HVAC buyers are already under pressure. The concept keeps the language serious and operational: call now, request service, explain the issue, and move toward the right dispatch or scheduling step.

Symptom 01

Warm air at the vents even though the system is running

Symptom 02

Short cycling, frozen lines, or weak airflow during heavy heat

Symptom 03

Loud startup, unexplained shutdowns, or rising comfort complaints

Repair step 01

Confirm the symptom and whether the issue feels urgent

Repair messaging stays practical and next-step focused instead of turning into vague contractor filler.

Repair step 02

Route the homeowner toward a call or service request without forcing a full read

Repair messaging stays practical and next-step focused instead of turning into vague contractor filler.

Repair step 03

Use approved proof, real service-area details, and real repair process language in the live build

Repair messaging stays practical and next-step focused instead of turning into vague contractor filler.

Repair CTA architecture

Call and request-service actions stay visible on mobile

Repair urgency is acknowledged without unsupported response-time claims

After-hours framing stays placeholder-only until approved

Live repair copy should use approved dispatch timing, inventory language, and review proof only.

Next view

Install buyers need a different page rhythm.

The install view slows the tone down, separates financing, and gives estimate shoppers more breathing room.

Open install page