
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.
Many law firms charge $150-$500 for an initial consultation, yet collecting payment before the meeting remains a manual, friction-filled process. This agent presents your consultation fee structure during the booking conversation and directs prospects to complete payment. Firms that collect fees upfront report 30-50% fewer no-shows compared to those that bill after the meeting, directly protecting attorney time and revenue.
IP law encompasses trademarks, patents, copyrights, trade secrets, and licensing. The agent routes visitors to the correct service path based on their needs, collecting different data points for each category. A visitor seeking trademark registration sees questions about mark type and class of goods, while a patent inquiry gathers details about the invention and prior art searches.
Long intake forms overwhelm visitors and cause abandonment. The AI agent uses progressive disclosure, revealing each question only after the previous one is answered. This technique keeps the process feeling manageable, and firms typically see 3-5x higher completion rates compared to traditional web forms or downloadable PDFs.
The agent evaluates each visitor's case against your firm's qualification criteria before offering a free consultation. This filters out cases outside your practice areas or below your minimum case value, ensuring your attorneys only spend time on consultations with genuine case potential.
The agent can present different filing requirements based on the visitor's selected state of incorporation. Since registered agent rules vary by jurisdiction (Delaware requires a physical in-state office, for example), the bot surfaces relevant information and collects state-specific data points during the conversation.
Full-service firms deal with wildly different inquiry types in the same day: a first-time buyer asking about conveyancing, a worker with an employment dispute, and a family needing a will drafted. The agent handles all of these through branching conversation logic, asking the right questions for each service and routing to the correct department. This replaces the receptionist triage function for website visitors and ensures every inquiry lands with the right person.
According to Clio, 57% of law firm communications happen outside traditional business hours. Injury victims, potential plaintiffs, and people facing urgent legal issues do not wait until 9 AM to seek help. This agent operates continuously, ensuring that a visitor who arrives at 2 AM on a holiday weekend receives a thorough, empathetic case evaluation — not a voicemail prompt. The first firm to respond wins the client 78% of the time, and this agent responds in under 30 seconds.
A pre-revenue solo founder has very different legal needs than a Series B company with 50 employees. The agent segments prospects by company stage, employee count, and funding history, ensuring that your attorneys know whether they are advising on initial incorporation or a complex equity restructuring before the first meeting. This prevents mismatched consultations that waste attorney time and frustrate founders.
Employment discrimination claims vary significantly based on the protected class involved. The agent uses branching logic to identify whether the claim involves race, gender, age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, pregnancy, or national origin. Each path triggers a tailored set of follow-up questions relevant to that specific claim type, ensuring your attorneys receive the precise information they need to evaluate case merit.
Most employees struggle to understand the difference between basic and premium legal benefit tiers. The agent presents plan details in plain language, comparing coverage levels side by side and highlighting what each tier adds. This reduces the volume of "what does my plan cover?" calls to HR and increases enrollment rates by helping employees make confident decisions.
Corporate legal firms typically offer a dozen or more distinct services, from LLC formation to trademark registration to annual report filing. This agent handles the full service catalog in a single conversation flow, routing each prospect to the correct service line based on their answers. No more generic contact forms that require manual sorting by your intake staff.
Family law inquiries involve deeply personal topics like domestic conflict, custody fears, and financial vulnerability. This AI agent uses empathetic, non-judgmental language calibrated for divorce and custody scenarios, helping prospects feel heard and safe enough to share the details your attorneys need to evaluate their case.
The agent identifies the specific reason for the claimant's denial: insufficient medical documentation, surveillance-based termination, vocational assessment disputes, pre-existing condition exclusions, or missed filing deadlines. This categorization helps your attorneys prioritize cases and prepare for the specific insurer tactics they will encounter before the first consultation.
Defense firms often handle multiple case types with different attorneys or teams. The agent identifies the visitor's legal situation and routes them to the correct practice area. A DUI inquiry goes to your DUI specialist, a federal investigation lead goes to your federal defense team. This structured routing eliminates manual sorting and accelerates response times.
The agent walks users through each section of a contract methodically, from party identification and scope of work to payment terms, intellectual property provisions, termination clauses, and governing law. Instead of asking someone to fill out a 15-field form or navigate a complex document editor, the conversational format breaks contract creation into digestible questions. Users without legal training can produce structurally sound agreements because the agent handles the logic of what needs to be included based on the contract type.
The agent guides visitors through a structured set of questions about ownership structure, tax preferences, fundraising plans, and personal liability tolerance. Based on responses, it highlights the most relevant entity types, giving your prospects a clear starting point and giving your team pre-qualified leads who already understand their options.
The agent determines whether a visitor needs a simple strike-off, a solvent MVL for tax-efficient extraction of company assets, or a CVL for insolvent businesses. This upfront triage means your advisors receive leads already categorized by complexity and service type, reducing wasted consultation time on mismatched inquiries.
The agent identifies whether a veteran is dealing with an initial disability claim, a rating increase request, a denied claim appeal, or a supplemental claim with new evidence. This upfront categorization ensures your attorneys receive properly segmented leads and can prioritize cases based on claim type and complexity.
A solo practitioner evaluating case management software has fundamentally different needs than a 200-attorney firm. The agent captures firm size early in the conversation and adjusts its messaging accordingly, highlighting solo/small firm pricing for smaller prospects and enterprise features like multi-office deployment and advanced analytics for larger firms. This segmentation ensures your sales team receives leads pre-sorted by deal size.
Many website visitors arrive with a vague understanding of their legal issue. The agent asks clarifying questions to match their situation to the right practice area at your firm. A visitor who says "my landlord won't return my deposit" gets routed to your real estate litigation team, not your corporate transactional group. This intelligent matching reduces misrouted inquiries and improves the prospect's first impression of your firm.
The agent asks structured questions about the incident date, statute of limitations exposure, whether the prospect has existing legal representation, and fault circumstances. These screening questions let your team focus consultation time on cases with genuine merit rather than spending 20 minutes on the phone only to discover the statute has expired.
Immigration firms typically offer 8-15 distinct service types. The agent guides visitors through a conversational service menu, asking clarifying questions to identify the exact service they need. A prospect unsure whether they need a work permit or an employment visa gets guided to the correct category without needing to parse your website's service pages.
The agent presents visa and immigration categories in plain language, helping prospects identify whether they need an employment-based visa, family petition, asylum application, or another service. Based on their selection, the lead routes to the attorney on your team who specializes in that category, eliminating manual triage.
The agent conducts a structured intake conversation that mirrors what your best paralegal would ask: current immigration status, country of citizenship, employer sponsorship status, family relationships to U.S. citizens or permanent residents, and any pending applications or prior denials. Based on the answers, it identifies the relevant visa category and routes the inquiry to the attorney on your team who handles that case type, with a complete intake summary attached.