AutoOps vs Workiz

Operational Matrix

Workiz vs AutoOps

Workiz’s integrated telecom for emergency dispatch versus AutoOps’ frictionless multi-day workflows and published fixed pricing — Basic $500, Translation or AI $850, Ultra all features.

Where They Beat AutoOps

Fair credit where it is due — this is what Workiz does especially well.

Their edge

Integrated Telecom

Built-in VoIP and call masking, with strong tooling for tracking ad spend to phone numbers — especially useful for emergency-only dispatch models.

Where AutoOps Wins (The Operational Reality)

What shows up when you run a real shop — not a demo environment.

AutoOps advantage

Frictionless Usage

Workiz carries a high base cost plus usage penalties for SMS and calls. AutoOps supports multi-day dispatching and price sheets without nickel-and-diming the workflows you use every day.

The Strategic Trade-Off

Choose Workiz if your model relies on emergency dispatch telecom metrics (for example, locksmiths); pay a massive premium for those call features.

AutoOps pricing stays transparent

Matrix comparisons should not wipe the economics. Here is what AutoOps publishes.

Published AutoOps tiers

  • Basic — $500/mo — core shop ops (dispatch, billing, mobile, Customer Hub)
  • Translation or AI credits — $850/mo — everything in Basic, plus your choice of translation or AI credits
  • Ultra — all features — full suite (translation + AI + Dual-Shield + priority support)
  • Unlimited technicians on every plan — not per-tech
  • $1,500 setup fee, waived with a two-year contract
  • Military benefit: 15% off

The Real Differentiator: Labor Flexibility

The biggest advantage AutoOps has — and the one competitors struggle to match — is payroll and labor flexibility.

Platforms like Jobber and Housecall Pro were built for a sterile business model. When real shops introduce complex variables — uncontrolled standby, techs driving personal vehicles — those platforms force spreadsheet workarounds.

AutoOps handles price sheets, multi-day dispatching, and complex payroll models natively. It absorbs the real administrative burden instead of leaving you with an expensive digital calendar.

Who should choose which?

Honest fit guidance based on the trade-off above.

Lean toward Workiz if…

Your business model depends on emergency dispatch telecom metrics — call masking, VoIP, and tying ad spend to phone numbers — and that stack is load-bearing for how you sell.

Lean toward AutoOps if…

You want multi-day dispatching and price sheets without usage penalties on core workflows, plus fixed monthly tiers with unlimited technicians.

  • Basic $500 · Translation or AI $850 · Ultra · setup waived with 2-year

Honest caveats

  • This page is not legal advice. Dual-Shield helps operationalize compliance workflows; counsel still matters for PAGA / CSLB risk.
  • Feature sets change. Re-verify competitor claims before each major publish.
  • Workiz telecom features, usage rates, and plan packaging change — confirm call/SMS pricing and base fees on Workiz’s current materials.
  • Migration effort exists either direction; do not promise “switch in a weekend” without delivery capacity.

See if AutoOps fits your shop

Walk through dispatch, price sheets, payroll flexibility, and transparent pricing with our team.

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