The agency math of a dead lead form

Your client doesn't blame the SMTP provider. They blame you. How silent form failures turn into churned retainers, and how monitoring turns into a line item you can sell.


July 8, 2026 · Formitor

Here is a conversation every agency owner has had, or will have:

“Hey, quick question. We haven’t gotten any enquiries from the website in about a month. Is something wrong with it?”

By the time this call happens, three things are already true. The form has been broken for weeks. The client found out before you did. And whatever the technical explanation is, the client has quietly re-filed you from “the people who get us leads” to “the people we pay who didn’t notice our leads were gone”.

The blame always lands on the agency

The actual cause is almost never the agency’s code. An SMTP provider changed auth requirements. A plugin auto-updated. A mailbox filled up. Technically, none of that is your fault.

Commercially, all of it is. The client pays you so they don’t have to think about the website. “It was the mail relay” is not an answer that saves a retainer. “We caught it in 40 minutes and fixed it before you lost a single day of leads” is.

Monitoring is retainer insurance

Run the numbers on one mid-size client. A form that produces a steady flow of enquiries, a close rate, an average job value. Multiply out what four silent weeks costs the client, then compare it to what the retainer earns you in a year. A single churned client, plus the referrals they never make, dwarfs the cost of monitoring the entire portfolio.

That’s the defensive case. The offensive case is better.

Sell the green badge

A monitoring line item does something subtle: it converts invisible work into visible work. A client status page that shows every form checked, every check passing, timestamped, is renewal ammunition. It’s the difference between “trust us, we watch your site” and a link the client can open at 11 p.m. and see for themselves.

Agencies already resell hosting, security, and backups. Form and checkout monitoring is the same motion, except it protects the one thing the client actually judges the website on: whether the phone rings.

Where to start

Put your two most important client sites on the free plan. If nothing breaks, it costs you nothing. When something does break, and eventually it will, you’ll get the alert instead of the phone call, and that difference is the whole business case.

Catch the failure before the client does.

Free plan: 2 sites, 20 forms, no card. See what it finds.