Roofing Storm Response Checklist: The First 48 Hours After Hail
You've got 48 hours before your storm market is saturated and your close rate starts dropping โ and most operators spend the first 12 of those hours just figuring out what happened and where.
An uncoordinated first 48 hours costs you 40โ60% of the contracts that a well-executed deployment would have captured in the same zone.
The fix: Here's the exact checklist โ by hour โ that top storm-restoration crews use to turn a hail alert into signed contracts before the competition arrives.
The first 48 hours after a qualifying hail event are the highest-leverage period in storm-restoration roofing. During this window, homeowners are aware of the event, adjusters haven't arrived, competitors are still figuring out where to go, and your close rate is at its peak. By hour 72, you're in a saturated market. By day 5, you're in a price war.
This checklist is organized by hour so you know exactly what should be happening at each stage.
Hours 0โ2: Event Detection and Zone Qualification
- โ Receive storm alert from hail tool (StormIntel / equivalent)
- โ Open hail polygon map โ identify all zones with 1"+ hail in target market
- โ Check property count per zone โ minimum 300 homes for full deployment
- โ Filter by roof age โ identify zones with highest concentration of 10โ20 year builds
- โ Rank top 3 zones by combined hail size + property density score
- โ Check NOAA storm report to cross-validate hail size
- โ Confirm licensing is active in target state
Hours 2โ8: Team Notification and Logistics
- โ Text all canvassing reps: storm details, deployment time (next morning, 7am), meeting location
- โ Create territories in routing app (Knockio / D2D CRM) for each team
- โ Order or confirm material access in target market โ call local supplier to confirm stock and pricing
- โ Book hotels if chasing out-of-market (within 2 hours of event for best rates)
- โ Load staging photos of the storm zone into team communication channel
- โ Confirm vehicle availability and fuel status
- โ Pack materials kit: door hangers, yard signs, inspection pads, inspection app loaded on tablets
Hours 8โ24: First Deployment Day
- โ Morning briefing: 15 minutes, event recap, territory assignment, pitch calibration, app check
- โ Deploy teams to zones โ Zone 1 team (best canvassers) to highest-hail-size territory
- โ Manager: monitor routing app dashboard q2h for door count per rep
- โ All signed appointments: CompanyCam photo of exterior, roof, and gutters on-site
- โ Signed contracts: photo of signed form, upload to CRM immediately
- โ All CRM entries tagged with storm event name and date
- โ EOD debrief: zone close rates, rep performance review, territory reassignment for day 2
StormIntel shows you exactly which ZIP codes got hit, how large the hail was, and how many rooftops are in the zone โ before your competition loads their maps. See plans →
Hours 24โ48: Second Deployment and Adjuster Pipeline
- โ Pre-route day 2 territories (based on day 1 close rate data โ deploy to highest-performing zones)
- โ Begin scheduling adjuster appointments for day 1 contracts โ call before 9am
- โ File claims for any homeowners who need assistance โ many storm homeowners don't know the claims process
- โ Follow up on any "interested but not signed" contacts from day 1 โ text follow-up before 8am
- โ Pull next 48-hour weather forecast โ is another event possible? Pre-position if yes.
- โ Update close rate tracker: contracts/zone/rep. Compare to previous events to spot outliers.
- โ Begin ordering materials for confirmed ACV amounts as checks start arriving
What Not to Do in the First 48 Hours
- Don't deploy without storm data. Driving neighborhoods without hail polygon data burns the most valuable time in the cycle. 20 minutes on your storm tool is worth 4 hours of windshield scouting.
- Don't skip the morning briefing. Reps without event context close 30โ40% less โ they can't answer the homeowner's first question ("how big was the hail on my block?").
- Don't wait for NOAA to confirm. NOAA data lags 18โ36 hours. Real-time polygon tools are faster. Use NOAA for documentation later, not for deployment decisions today.
- Don't let leads sit in the canvassing app. Every lead should be in your CRM with a follow-up task within 2 hours of logging. Leads that sit overnight without a next action disappear.
For the full crew deployment structure, see our storm deployment plan template. For talking to homeowners in the field, see our homeowner conversation guide.
Bottom Line
The first 48 hours is your window. Every checklist item above represents a decision or action that, if missed, costs contracts. Operators who've been doing this for 3+ seasons run this checklist from memory โ but they all started by following it on paper until it became automatic.
Ready to work smarter on storm days? StormIntel delivers real-time hail polygons, property counts, and roof-age data so your crew hits the right doors first. Start free →
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a roofer do immediately after a hail storm?
First: verify the event and qualify the zone using a real-time hail tool (StormIntel) โ takes 20 minutes. Second: notify your canvassing team and create territories in your routing app. Third: brief and deploy within 24 hours. The first deployment day is worth 2โ3x day 3 in the same market.
How long does a storm market stay viable for canvassing?
The first 48 hours are peak close rates (8โ12%). By day 3โ5, competing contractors have the market and close rates drop to 5โ7%. After day 7, you're in a saturated market at 3โ5% close rate. Most operators see 60โ70% of their total storm contracts come from the first 3 days.
When should I call the insurance adjuster after signing a storm contract?
Begin scheduling adjuster appointments within 24 hours of signing โ the morning of day 2 in most operations. Adjusters in active storm markets book 2โ3 weeks out quickly. The sooner your jobs are in the inspection queue, the sooner ACV checks arrive.
How do I track which contracts came from which storm event?
Tag every contact and contract in your CRM with the storm event name and date (e.g., 'DFW_May14_2026'). This lets you calculate ROI per event โ revenue, close rate, average contract value, and gross margin โ so you can compare events and markets over time.
What is the most important thing to do in the first hour after a hail event?
Pull up your hail polygon tool and run zone qualification โ identify which ZIP codes got 1"+ hail and rank them by property density and roof age. This 20-minute step determines whether your entire deployment goes to the right neighborhoods. Everything else โ logistics, briefing, canvassing โ depends on getting this right.
Higher Close Rate. Less Windshield Time.
StormIntel tells you exactly which streets in which ZIPs have real, current-storm damage โ so your inspectors stop wasting daylight on old claims and tire-kickers.
- ZIP-level damage severity scoring
- Ranked street lists for inspectors
- Built for inspection-first sales teams
- 30-day money-back guarantee