
Looking for AI agent ideas? Browse a curated collection of example agents built for specific industries and enterprise use cases — customer support, pipeline generation, customer onboarding, account servicing, and more. Each example is interactive, so you can experience the agent firsthand and imagine what's possible for your team.
Most businesses field questions across a dozen or more topic areas, from billing and returns to product specifications and service coverage. The agent organizes your entire FAQ library into a navigable conversational structure, so visitors find answers in two or three exchanges instead of scrolling through pages of content. According to Forrester, 53% of U.S. online adults are likely to abandon their online purchase if they cannot find a quick answer to their question. Conversational FAQ agents address this directly.
The average bathroom remodel costs between $12,000 and $35,000 depending on scope, according to Remodeling Magazine's Cost vs. Value Report. The agent captures budget expectations early in the conversation so your sales team can prioritize leads that match your typical project range and avoid spending estimator hours on projects that fall outside your sweet spot.
Multi-location businesses and franchise networks need leads routed to the correct territory. The agent maps visitor zip codes or cities to your predefined service zones and sends each lead to the responsible branch or franchisee. This eliminates the manual sorting that wastes office staff time at headquarters.
Home services companies often offer plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and general maintenance under one roof. The agent categorizes each request by service type and can route leads to the appropriate department or technician automatically, reducing manual triage by your office staff.
The agent categorizes bidders by their collecting interests and spending ranges, then surfaces relevant upcoming lots. A bidder interested in mid-century modern furniture sees different lot previews than someone collecting contemporary photography. This targeted approach increases engagement and drives higher bid participation rates.
Rather than asking prospects to describe their aesthetic preferences in words, the agent presents curated style categories and can embed reference images within the conversation. This dramatically improves the quality of creative briefs your team receives. A prospect selecting "photorealistic nature scene for a restaurant patio" is far more actionable than "something nice for our wall."
The agent captures budget ranges early in the conversation, allowing your team to prioritize high-value inquiries and propose artists that fit the client's price point. This prevents wasted time on mismatched expectations between clients and performers.
The agent walks applicants through a consistent set of questions about their exhibition concept, medium, and space needs. This ensures every submission arrives in a standardized format, making it easy for curators to compare proposals side by side rather than parsing freeform emails.
The agent can display product images and collection highlights within the conversation, letting browsers see ring styles, stone cuts, and setting options before committing to a visit. This visual engagement mimics the browsing experience shoppers expect from luxury retail and increases the likelihood they will book a consultation.
The agent asks targeted questions about pain location, duration, and severity before the appointment is booked. This gives the therapist a clinical brief ahead of the session, reducing intake time in the treatment room and enabling better preparation for each client.
The agent presents your full service catalog in a conversational format, letting clients browse treatments by category. Whether a client wants a balayage consultation or a deep-tissue massage add-on, the bot guides them to the right option without overwhelming them with a static price list.
Alloy wheels come in a wide range of finishes, and the repair method differs significantly between them. A standard painted alloy requires a different process than a diamond-cut wheel, which needs precision lathe turning and re-lacquering. The agent walks customers through finish identification using visual guides and descriptions, ensuring your technicians know exactly what equipment and materials to prepare before the wheel arrives.
The agent collects travel dates and return times upfront, then presents only available lots and pricing for that specific window. This prevents double-bookings and eliminates the back-and-forth that happens when travelers request dates that are already at capacity, a common pain point during holiday travel seasons.
The agent walks customers through a structured ordering conversation, collecting item details, quantities, delivery address, and preferred time slots. This guided approach reduces order errors compared to freeform text or phone ordering, where miscommunication is common in delivery logistics.
A general practice firm might handle everything from DUI defense to commercial real estate closings. The agent maps each visitor's stated needs to the correct practice area and attorney, preventing the all-too-common problem of a family law inquiry landing on a corporate attorney's desk. This intelligent routing reduces internal triage time and ensures faster response to prospects.
Employment law spans a wide range of claim types, from FLSA wage violations to EEOC discrimination complaints to FMLA leave disputes. The agent classifies each visitor's concern into the correct subcategory based on their responses, so your firm can route leads to attorneys with the relevant specialization rather than funneling everyone to a general intake queue.
The quiz format presents workplace situations drawn from actual employment discrimination case patterns -- unequal pay, pregnancy-related adverse actions, sexual harassment, hostile work environment, and retaliation for protected complaints. Each scenario includes a brief explanation of the applicable federal or state law, so visitors leave the interaction more informed about their rights regardless of whether they proceed to share a personal claim. This positions your firm as a trusted authority, not just a service provider looking for clients.
Legal marketplaces typically offer dozens of services across multiple categories: business formation, IP protection, compliance, litigation, tax filing, and more. The agent acts as an intelligent filter, asking two or three questions to narrow the visitor to the exact service they need. This reduces decision fatigue and prevents prospects from bouncing because they could not find the right option.
The agent adjusts clause language and required disclosures based on the jurisdiction you specify. Whether you operate under GDPR in the EU, CCPA in California, or CAN-SPAM for email-based businesses, the generated document reflects the regulatory requirements that apply to your geography and customer base.
Estate planning firms typically offer a range of related services: wills and trusts, tax planning, probate administration, guardianship designations, and charitable giving strategies. The agent maps visitor responses to the correct service line and attorney, ensuring that a prospect interested in generation-skipping trusts is not routed to a probate specialist.
The SSDI appeals process has distinct stages — initial application denial, request for reconsideration, Administrative Law Judge hearing, and Appeals Council review — each with different legal strategies, timelines, and win rates. The agent identifies where each claimant stands in this process early in the conversation, so your team immediately knows whether they are dealing with a fresh denial that needs reconsideration paperwork or a claimant who needs ALJ hearing preparation.
The agent dynamically presents membership benefits based on what the visitor cares about most. A solo practitioner hears about malpractice insurance discounts and CLE libraries, while an in-house counsel learns about corporate membership tiers and compliance resources. This personalized approach mirrors the consultative selling style that drives membership conversions.
Accident victims often visit three to five law firm websites before contacting anyone. The firms that explain their process, show their track record, and answer common questions upfront win more clients. This agent delivers your firm's story conversationally, highlighting case results, attorney credentials, client testimonials, and your contingency fee structure. Visitors who engage with this interactive presentation arrive at consultations more confident and further along in their decision-making process.
Speed is the single biggest factor in personal injury lead conversion. Prospects who receive engagement within five minutes retain counsel at seven times the rate of those waiting over 30 minutes. This agent responds in under 30 seconds, every time, on every channel. That instant engagement captures leads at peak intent, when the prospect is actively looking for legal help and has not yet contacted another firm.