Grooming appointments, daycare slots, boarding windows, client reminders, and rebooks all want one place to land. When that place is the person mid-groom with a dog on the table, the schedule only stays full because someone remembers every loose end.
The desk can see where attention is needed without reconstructing it manually.
Scheduling becomes part of the workflow instead of a separate chase.
Follow-up happens before the opportunity goes quiet.
The desk keeps the calendar warm without making the owner become the reminder system.
The point is not replacing the hire. It is showing which part of Dapper Doggy Day Spaw should stop depending on one person to remember and route every handoff.
Dapper Doggy Day Spaw gets a cleaner operating layer before the next hire inherits the same pile.
If we're wrong, the conversation ends here. If we're close, this is rarely the only thing you're holding together by hand.
We built this from public information. How close did we get?
Tell us where we got it right, or where we missed. Under a minute.