Guides · Buying
What to Look For in an AI Receptionist for a Service Business
Every AI receptionist demo sounds impressive for ninety seconds. The question is what happens on call four hundred, at 9 p.m., when a real customer asks a real question about your cancellation policy. Here's the checklist that separates tools that answer phones from tools that win customers.
The problem: they all sound good in the demo
The AI receptionist market has exploded, and every option — subscription platforms, agency builds, DIY tools — leads with the same promise: never miss a call. But "answering" is the easy part. The value lives in what happens next: did it answer correctly, from your actual business? Did the lead land somewhere you'll see it? Did the caller get booked? A slick voice that fumbles those three things is just expensive hold music.
The seven things that actually matter
- 1. Trained on your business, not a script. It should answer from your real services, prices, policies, and FAQs. If it can't quote your rates or your service area, callers will notice immediately.
- 2. Lead capture you can see. Every caller's name, number, and need should land somewhere simple — a Google Sheet — with an instant email so you can act while the lead is hot.
- 3. Real calendar booking. Not "we'll pass along the message" — an appointment, in your calendar, before the call ends.
- 4. Guardrails. It must stay on topic and decline to improvise. An agent that wanders or guesses is a liability wearing your business's name.
- 5. Multilingual answers, so no customer in your area is turned away by language.
- 6. Ownership. Built on your own accounts, it's yours forever. Built on someone else's platform, it disappears the day you stop paying.
- 7. Proof before payment. A free working demo trained on your business — the only test that means anything.
What a real call should sound like
Caller: "Hey, what do you charge for a service call, and do you cover the north side?"
Agent: "Our standard service call is listed right in our pricing, and yes — the north side is in our service area. Can I get your name and number?"
Caller: "Priya Nair, 555-0192."
Agent: "Thanks, Priya. I've got tomorrow at 2 p.m. open — want me to book it?"
Caller: "Sure."
Agent: "Booked. The owner just received your details, and you'll get a confirmation shortly."
Run this checklist against a live demo
Botlery builds a working demo trained on your business before you pay a cent. Grill it, then decide.
Get mine built freeHow Botlery checks the boxes
- Every agent is trained on your real data — services, prices, policies, FAQs — and guardrailed to stay on topic.
- Leads go to a Google Sheet with an instant owner email, and appointments book into your calendar.
- Multilingual by default.
- You own it: phone and voice agents are built on your own accounts for a one-time fee.
- Demo first, payment after — the working demo is free, and there's a live example already running for Ric's Repairs, a real handyman business.
What it costs
The AI phone agent (answers your business line; number set up for you) and the AI voice agent (speaks with visitors on your website) are $300 one-time each. The AI chatbot is $10/month (or $100/year — two months free) managed, or $200 one-time owned. Full comparison in the AI receptionist cost breakdown — including why agencies charging $2,000–$7,000 plus $300+/month don't check more of these boxes, just pricier ones.
The bottom line
Judge an AI receptionist the way you'd judge a hire: does it know the business, does it write things down, does it fill the calendar, and can you trust it unsupervised? Insist on testing all four free, on your own business, before paying. That test costs nothing with Botlery — which tells you something in itself.
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