Feature
Route-Aware Scheduling for Solo Service Businesses
Open time is not the same as reachable time. OnsitePilot is built to check whether a slot still works once travel, service duration, and buffer time are part of the decision.
Turn open calendar blocks into travel-aware arrival windows.
Filter out same-day requests that look open but break the route.
Reduce manual back-and-forth before a slot becomes real work.
Why route-aware scheduling matters
Most booking tools assume a free calendar block is automatically bookable. That logic fails for mobile and local operators because travel is part of the job, not a side detail.
A solo operator loses time twice when booking logic ignores route math: first during the customer conversation, then again when the schedule has to be repaired manually.
- Travel time changes whether a slot is actually usable.
- One reschedule can break the route for the rest of the day.
- Same-day leads need a fast pass or fail decision, not a fake maybe.
- Leave the operator with fewer manual route repairs after booking.
{
"routing": {
"provider": "tomtom",
"bufferTimeMin": 15,
"maxTravelDistanceMiles": 25,
"optimizeFor": "travelTime"
},
"constraints": {
"requireDeposit": true,
"rejectIfTravelExceeds": true
}
} How OnsitePilot approaches it
OnsitePilot is designed to qualify a booking against the real operating day. That means looking at travel, timing, and downstream schedule impact before a booking is treated as confirmed.
The goal is not to show more slots. The goal is to show fewer but better slots that a solo operator can actually deliver.
- Check route fit before the booking is locked.
- Protect buffer time between jobs.
- Keep schedule decisions aligned with how the day is actually worked.
- Avoid exposing slots that look free but fail once travel is included.
Best fit
Route-aware scheduling matters most for businesses that travel to customers or move between locations during the day.
- Mobile detailing
- Home services
- Beauty and wellness visits
- Repair and maintenance
- Private instructors with travel between appointments
- Operators who need tighter route density over time.
Frequently asked questions
- Why is route-aware scheduling better than a normal calendar check?
- A normal calendar check only sees open time. Route-aware scheduling asks whether that time is still usable once travel and buffer time are included.
- Does this only matter for same-day bookings?
- No. Same-day bookings make the problem more obvious, but route logic also affects reschedules, back-to-back jobs, and any day with multiple service locations.
- Who benefits most from route-aware scheduling?
- Solo service businesses that travel to customers benefit the most because every bad slot creates operational stress for the rest of the day.