Answering the call

Crown Point answering service provides professional response — no matter the hour

Sherry Langdeau and Tabetha Alvarado like to say they went to school at work, and it prepared them perfectly to become entrepreneurs.

The Crown Point residents together run Great Lakes Communications, an answering service that handles calls 24/7 for companies throughout the Region and the country — and impresses clients with its responsiveness and accountability.

Great Lakes Communications, based in Crown Point and known as GLC, has been in business since 2015. The company provides a real-time response to calls received by businesses, service companies, doctors, nonprofits, religious organizations and even crisis hotlines.

“We never close; we’re always open,” said Langdeau, who has been working in the answering service industry since 1999. “We provide that relief to the business owners. They know they can leave at the end of the day, and we’ll take their calls, and they don’t have to worry about missing calls. Because missed calls is missing revenue.”

GLC’s owners met in 2002 when Langdeau’s team at a local answering company initially passed over hiring Alvarado. Landeau thought she was “too pushy,” but a different candidate didn’t work out. So, Alvarado got her chance.

“At the time, I was selling perfume on the streets, which was not great,” said Alvarado, who decided college wasn’t for her because she felt too many required classes were irrelevant. “I was like, ‘I want an inside job where I talk. I like talking.’”

The role was a fit, so the pair continued their on-the-job learning, taking calls and building industry knowledge. When their employer passed away and successors closed the business, Langdeau and Alvarado saw an opportunity to start their own venture. The idea was to provide customized answering services “and do it a little better,” Langdeau said.

Early challenges included finding employees who could understand the evolving technological side of answering calls, inputting key details and dispatching service. Younger workers usually proved a better fit.

Now, technological know-how isn’t so hard to find, but conversational ability is, GLC’s owners said. Hiring younger generations comes with the responsibility of training workers to speak professionally, listen accurately, ask questions and empathize with the stress of frustrating situations.

As women entrepreneurs, GLC’s leaders see themselves as skilled multitaskers who can truly understand callers’ problems, whether it’s a floor drain backing up into a finished basement or a baby screaming with a fever.

“We can empathize with whatever they’re calling about. We can feel what they’re feeling. We can let them know and reassure them that we are here; we’re here to help. It’s very comforting,” Langdeau said. “We train our agents to answer the phones how we answer the phones.”

These relational skills are the benefits that live answering agents at GLC bring over automated services through artificial intelligence, Langdeau and Alvarado said.

“It’s what’s missing in society, because a lot of people can’t handle one conversation — and here we’re having them one after another,” Alvarado said. “And it brings that human connection with our clients’ callers.”

GLC aims to sustain other businesses as an extension of their team, helping ensure startups and growing businesses don’t miss opportunities. The service’s smallest client package starts at $30 a month — and still provides 24/7 answering coverage.

Support from GLC proved vital early this year to Dan Wood Co., a plumbing, heating and cooling service provider based in Portage, Michigan. Manager Monica Schriemer said temperatures were rising out of a deep freeze when 5 p.m. on a Friday rolled around, and calls were set to be handled by GLC over the weekend.

The GLC team took 60 calls for Dan Wood Co. before regular business hours began again Monday morning, 40 of them requiring dispatch of emergency services. Schriemer said she reached out to Langdeau and Alvarado twice during the high-call-volume weekend to change plans and better handle the influx of emergencies, “and they immediately responded with their full support.”

“Their flexibility, teamwork and commitment were instrumental in preventing what could have been an overwhelming and chaotic weekend from becoming a disaster,” Schriemer said. “Despite supporting multiple businesses, they were willing to adapt quickly, collaborate in real time and adjust their normal procedures to help us manage an unusually demanding situation.”

GLC plans to stay nimble and continue supporting businesses of all sizes, answering whatever calls may come, no matter the time.

“Nowadays, everyone expects to get an answer — now,” Langdeau said. “We can answer for any client. It doesn’t matter what your business is. Every business needs an answering service.” ▪

Read more stories from the current issue of Northwest Indiana Business Magazine.

Don Babcock

Count way to success

Purdue University Northwest's Don Babcock argues weak math preparation is closing career doors for students, pointing to the U.S. ranking 34th in math among 78 nations.
Read More
Toyia Moore

Big on housing

The Northwest Indiana Reinvestment Alliance runs HUD-certified counseling and financial literacy classes across Lake County as foreclosures and evictions rise statewide.
Read More
photo of Glow-in-the-Dark Smooth Bore fire hose nozzle

Nozzle worth noting

Elkhart Brass Manufacturing's glow-in-the-dark firehose nozzle won the 2025 Coolest Thing Made IN Indiana contest, beating 48 products from 36 communities.
Read More
Blessing Mene

Essential adviser

Blessing Mene, enFocus's director of entrepreneurship, draws on a career supporting 100-plus startups and $25M raised to coach South Bend-area founders.
Read More
A large group of people are gathered in a gym, practicing martial arts.

Economic power of play

Northwest Indiana's 114 scheduled youth sports events in 2026 could generate $45M, fueled by facilities like the Hammond Sportsplex and Elkhart aquatics center.
Read More
Wellfield Botanic Gardens in Elkhart

Sustainable prospects

From a food-waste plant in LaPorte County to PFAS detection in South Bend, Northwest Indiana companies are building sustainability into core business operations.
Read More
Three men are sitting on stools in front of a fireplace, engaged in conversation.

Lots of buyers out there

Indiana's office of entrepreneurship and innovation is partnering with regional groups to help small business owners plan exits as baby boomer retirements accelerate ownership turnover.
Read More
A group of six women posing for a picture in a room with a a water purification project in Guatemala.

Trending careers in trades

Northern Indiana's construction industry is pushing to recruit more high school graduates, pointing to paid apprenticeships, major project demand, and AI-resistant job security.
Read More
Best of Business Awards 2026

2026 award winners

Northwest Indiana Business Magazine's 2026 Best of Business winners, chosen by reader survey for the 21st year, share how hiring, technology upgrades, and new offices shaped their 2025.
Read More
Chris Campbell

Professional advancement

Northwest Indiana and Michiana professionals across banking, health care, education, law, and manufacturing announce hires, promotions, and board appointments.
Read More
Cover of April-May 2026 Issue

In this issue

Alysa Liu’s gold-medal performance at the 2026 Winter Olympics might seem unattainable, but her attitude offers a valuable lesson in finding joy in our work. Business leaders in the Region…

Read More

Author

  • Wilson Family portrait at the Busse Woods Forest Preserve in Elk Grove on June 30, 2024.

    Marie Wilson has worked in local journalism and communications for more than a dozen years. She has received reporting awards from the Chicago Headline Club, Illinois Associated Press Media Editors, the Hearst Journalism Awards Program and the Daily Herald, where she covered suburban news, government and business for 10 years. Wilson has a degree in news-editorial journalism from the University of Illinois and lives in suburban Chicago.

    View all posts

Leave a Reply

Scroll to Top