
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.
Drivers can check vehicle assignments, report maintenance issues, or request schedule changes directly through WhatsApp without calling a dispatcher. With over 2 billion WhatsApp users globally, deploying on this channel eliminates adoption barriers that plague custom fleet management apps.
The agent asks targeted questions about the prospect's current infrastructure, pain points, and desired outcomes to determine which of your technology solutions is the best fit. This structured approach reduces time-to-qualification and ensures prospects see only relevant offerings.
A mortgage lender has completely different software requirements than a commercial real estate lender or an SBA loan provider. The agent identifies the prospect's lending verticals and routes leads to the product specialist who can deliver the most relevant demo. This vertical-aware routing ensures that every prospect connects with a sales engineer who speaks their lending language and understands their regulatory environment.
LMS platforms serve fundamentally different use cases: a pharmaceutical company tracking mandatory compliance training operates differently than a tech startup running continuous skills development programs. The agent identifies the prospect's primary use case and routes the lead to the sales rep with the deepest expertise in that training domain, ensuring demo presentations focus on the scenarios that will drive the purchase decision.
Legal software requirements vary dramatically by practice area. A litigation firm needs document review and e-discovery integrations, while a transactional practice needs contract lifecycle management and deal room capabilities. The agent identifies the prospect's primary practice areas and routes leads to the product specialist with relevant demo expertise, ensuring every presentation hits the right features.
The agent searches LinkedIn to identify prospects matching your ideal customer profile without requiring manual Boolean searches or list-building sessions. Sales development teams typically spend 6-8 hours per week building prospect lists. This agent runs the same process continuously in the background, surfacing new qualified contacts as they appear. It filters out prospects who have already been contacted or exist in your CRM, so your team always works from a fresh, deduplicated pipeline.
Enterprise learning platforms serve radically different use cases: employee onboarding for a 50-person startup looks nothing like global compliance training for a 50,000-employee multinational. The agent segments prospects by their primary use case and routes them to the sales rep with the deepest expertise in that area, improving demo relevance and conversion rates.
Industrial engineering companies often have dozens of product lines spanning gases, equipment, engineering services, and aftermarket support. The agent acts as a guided navigator, helping each visitor find the products relevant to their application without wading through a complex product catalog. This reduces bounce rates on deep technical websites where visitors frequently leave because they cannot find what they need.
Early-stage products often solve problems that buyers do not yet know they have. The agent uses a conversational narrative to walk visitors through the problem, the current workaround, and how your product eliminates it. This story-driven approach is far more effective than bullet-point feature lists at creating the "aha moment" that converts curiosity into intent.
Consulting firms typically span multiple practice areas, from strategy and operations to technology and human capital. The agent identifies which practice the prospect's challenge falls under and routes the lead to the partner or director who owns that domain. This ensures that every prospect connects with the most relevant expert, improving first-meeting quality and conversion rates.
Workforce solution agencies typically offer multiple service lines: temporary staffing, temp-to-hire, direct placement, payroll services, and managed solutions programs. The AI agent identifies which service line fits the employer's need and routes the lead accordingly. This means your light industrial recruiter does not receive leads meant for your executive search division, and vice versa.
Window coverings are a highly visual purchase. The agent supports rich media including product images, swatch galleries, and links to lookbook pages within the conversation. Prospects can browse roller blind styles, fabric options, and color palettes without leaving the chat, creating an engaging shopping experience that drives them toward a consultation request.
Web and app agencies typically offer distinct service lines: UI/UX design, front-end development, back-end engineering, DevOps, QA testing, and ongoing maintenance. The agent identifies which services the prospect needs and routes the lead to the team that owns that service line. A prospect needing only UI/UX redesign reaches your design lead, while a full-stack project routes to a solutions architect.
Technology firms often offer 10+ service lines spanning application development, infrastructure management, cybersecurity, data analytics, and digital transformation consulting. The agent acts as an intelligent guide through this complexity, helping each visitor find the services that match their specific challenge. This prevents the overwhelm that causes prospects to bounce from dense, text-heavy service pages.
A prospect needing a native iOS app has different requirements than one looking for a cross-platform Flutter solution. The agent routes leads to the appropriate development team based on the stated platform preference, ensuring that prospects connect with engineers who specialize in their target technology stack from the first conversation.
Mental performance is a sensitive topic. Prospects visiting your website may be dealing with burnout, performance anxiety, or organizational stress. The agent uses carefully crafted language that acknowledges these challenges without being clinical or pushy. The tone matches the supportive, professional voice that consulting clients expect from their first interaction with your brand.
Immigration software buyers operate in every country and time zone. Corporate HR teams in Singapore, law firms in London, and government agencies in Washington all evaluate vendors on different schedules. This agent runs 24/7, ensuring that a prospect visiting your website at 2 AM your local time receives the same thorough qualification experience as someone arriving during business hours.
Fleet tech buyers often struggle to articulate exactly what they need from a telematics platform. The agent walks them through a structured assessment covering GPS tracking, driver behavior monitoring, fuel management, maintenance alerts, and compliance reporting. By the end of the conversation, both the prospect and your sales team have a clear picture of requirements, eliminating ambiguity from the discovery phase.
The agent categorizes prospects by fleet size, from small operations with 10-50 vehicles to enterprise fleets managing thousands. This segmentation determines which product tier, pricing model, and account team the lead gets routed to. Your sales team never wastes time pitching enterprise features to a small fleet operator or vice versa.
Engineering firms typically offer a dozen or more service lines spanning software development, systems integration, and managed services. This agent dynamically branches conversations based on the visitor's project type, ensuring that a prospect interested in embedded systems engineering sees different content than one exploring ERP implementation. Each branch captures the specific data points your sales team needs for that service line.
Business owners and marketing directors often describe their challenges in general terms: "our website isn't generating leads" or "we need a better online presence." The agent asks diagnostic questions about their current website traffic, conversion rates, digital advertising spend, and competitive landscape to identify whether they need a website redesign, SEO improvement, paid media management, or a combination. This consultative diagnosis builds trust and ensures the lead arrives with a clear service recommendation attached.
Cybersecurity buyers disengage from generic chatbots immediately. This agent is configured with industry-specific conversation paths that reference EDR, SIEM, SOAR, IAM, CSPM, zero-trust architecture, and threat intelligence naturally. It asks the precise technical questions a knowledgeable SDR would ask, building credibility from the first interaction and earning the right to capture contact details.
Corporate food service deals vary enormously based on the number of employees, number of locations, meal frequency, and delivery logistics. An office of 50 people needing daily lunch delivery is a fundamentally different engagement than a campus of 2,000 requiring full cafeteria management. The agent asks about employee count, number of office locations, whether they need on-site preparation or delivery, and peak meal times. This logistics qualification ensures your operations team can assess feasibility and margin before the first sales call, preventing wasted proposals for accounts that fall outside your service model.
Large IT services companies often list 20-50 service lines on their websites, creating decision fatigue for visitors. The agent asks two or three targeted questions about the prospect's industry, technology challenge, and desired outcome, then surfaces the 2-3 most relevant services. This guided navigation replaces the "browse and hope" experience that causes 70% of B2B website visitors to leave without engaging, according to Forrester Research.