
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.
Businesses often arrive unsure whether they need an operating lease, a capital lease, or a hire-purchase arrangement. The agent asks about asset usage duration, balance sheet preferences, and tax optimization goals to recommend the most appropriate structure. This guided approach demystifies leasing terminology for first-time lessees and ensures experienced buyers see the specific product that fits their financial strategy.
Many prospects arrive knowing they need "an app" but are unsure whether to invest in native iOS, native Android, cross-platform, or a progressive web app. The agent asks about target audience, performance requirements, budget constraints, and timeline to recommend the most appropriate platform approach. This consultative guidance mirrors the advice a senior solutions architect would give, building trust before the first meeting.
Air quality challenges vary widely: particulate matter in manufacturing, VOCs in chemical plants, biological contaminants in healthcare facilities, and vehicle emissions in parking structures. The agent identifies the prospect's specific pollutant concern and routes them to the appropriate product line. This targeted approach demonstrates technical expertise immediately and ensures your sales team receives leads categorized by application.
Enterprise buyers often arrive with a vague goal like "we want to use AI" without a specific use case defined. The agent asks about their industry, available data sources, business KPIs they want to improve, and current analytics maturity. From these responses, it identifies whether the prospect needs computer vision, NLP, predictive modeling, or a broader AI strategy engagement. This discovery converts vague interest into a scoped project discussion.
Business owners searching for accounting solutions often describe symptoms rather than requirements: "I'm spending too much time on invoicing" or "I need help with GST compliance." The agent asks targeted questions about their current workflow, time spent on financial tasks, and compliance concerns to identify which product features would provide the most value. This diagnostic approach builds trust and ensures the lead arrives with actionable context.
The most common reason startups fail to raise funding is not a bad idea — it is a business model that does not hold up under scrutiny. The agent systematically evaluates how you plan to make money, whether your pricing makes sense relative to the value delivered, and whether the model can sustain the margins needed to build a real company. It probes for the difference between revenue and profit, between a project and a business, and between a market that sounds big on a slide and one that actually converts to paying customers. PitchBook data shows that only 0.05% of startups that seek venture capital actually receive it. The founders who clear that bar are not necessarily the ones with the best ideas — they are the ones who can defend their business model under pressure.
The agent does not generate generic advice. It pulls step-by-step troubleshooting procedures directly from your organization's IT documentation and known error database. When an employee reports that Outlook is not syncing, the agent walks them through the specific resolution steps for your email environment — Exchange Online, on-premises Exchange, or hybrid — rather than offering a generic "restart your computer" response. This documentation-grounded approach means accuracy scales with your knowledge base quality, and every resolution the bot delivers is consistent with your IT team's approved procedures.
IT consulting prospects arrive at various stages of problem awareness. Some know they need a cloud migration; others just know their systems are slow. The agent asks diagnostic questions about their current infrastructure, pain points, and business goals to surface the real need. This consultative approach mirrors the experience of speaking with a senior consultant, building trust while gathering the information your team needs to prepare a relevant proposal.
Corporate training buyers arrive with different goals: some need onboarding automation, others need compliance training tracking, and some want a full learning experience platform. The agent asks about the prospect's primary use case and learner count, then highlights the most relevant product features and customer success stories. This targeted approach prevents the "feature overload" that causes 40% of B2B software visitors to leave without engaging.
Most small business owners do not fully understand how invoice factoring works or how it differs from traditional loans. The agent explains the process step by step: you submit unpaid invoices, receive an advance (typically 80-95% of invoice value), and the factoring company collects payment from your customers. This education reduces confusion, builds trust, and increases the likelihood that a prospect completes the application.
Not every demo request deserves the same level of attention. The agent asks qualifying questions about company size, number of integrations needed, current platform, and budget timeline. Based on responses, it can route enterprise prospects to senior AEs and smaller accounts to SDRs or self-service resources. This ensures your highest-value sales resources focus on the highest-value opportunities.
Large IT service companies often have dozens of overlapping product lines. A visitor searching for "document management" might need content services, records management, or compliance archiving depending on their use case. The agent asks clarifying questions to disambiguate intent and routes visitors to the exact product or solution page that matches their need. This eliminates the frustration of navigating mega-menus and product matrices that cause 67% of B2B website visitors to leave without converting (Formstack).
The agent scores responses in real time and segments participants by competency area. Rather than a single pass/fail result, participants receive a nuanced breakdown showing where they excel and where gaps exist. This segmentation data flows into your CRM as custom fields, allowing marketing automation to trigger targeted nurture sequences. A prospect with strong operational knowledge but weak financial acumen receives content about financial advisory services, not a generic newsletter.
Search-as-a-service providers typically offer multiple tiers based on query volume, indexing limits, and feature access. The agent asks about the prospect's expected document count, queries per second, and feature requirements (autocomplete, faceted search, geo-search), then recommends the right tier. This guided approach prevents prospects from underestimating their needs or bouncing because the pricing page felt overwhelming.
Homebuyers rarely know which inspections they need beyond the general home inspection. The agent asks about the property type, age, location, and specific concerns (water damage, foundation issues, pest history), then recommends the appropriate inspection package. This guided recommendation increases average order value by 15-25% because buyers add specialty inspections they would not have selected from a static service menu.
Nonprofit websites often overwhelm visitors with dense reports and navigation menus. The agent presents your mission, impact data, and success stories in a conversational format that keeps visitors engaged. It can share specific program outcomes, beneficiary stories, and funding allocation breakdowns in response to visitor questions. This interactive format increases time-on-site and emotional connection, both of which correlate with higher donor conversion.
Fintech products are inherently complex. The agent explains each offering in accessible terms, answering prospect questions about API integration requirements, settlement timelines, supported asset classes, or compliance features. This consultative approach mirrors the experience of speaking with a knowledgeable sales rep, reducing drop-off rates that typically plague fintech websites where 96% of visitors leave without taking action.
Enterprise businesses span multiple product lines, service tiers, and partner programs. This agent supports branching conversation paths that address distinct knowledge domains within a single interface. A channel partner asking about reseller margins gets a different flow than an end customer asking about product specifications, and both get accurate, up-to-date answers without bouncing between departments.
IT companies typically offer 10-20 distinct service lines, and prospects rarely know which one they need. The agent presents services in an intuitive conversational menu, asks qualifying questions about the visitor's business environment and pain points, and recommends the most relevant offerings. This guided navigation replaces the "services page with 15 links" experience that causes 38% of B2B website visitors to leave due to poor content structure.
The property claims industry has distinct buyer personas with different decision criteria. The agent runs separate conversation tracks for adjusters evaluating field tools, contractors assessing estimating accuracy, claims managers analyzing workflow efficiency, and executives comparing total cost of ownership. This persona-aware approach produces leads that your sales team can engage with relevant talking points from the first call.
The agent walks prospects through a lightweight assessment of their current document workflow, identifying bottlenecks like manual routing, physical storage, version control issues, and signature delays. This structured assessment gives your sales team a pre-built diagnosis to reference during the demo, accelerating the path from interest to proposal.
The agent can share links to relevant portfolio samples during the conversation, tailored to the visitor's industry and ebook type. Showing your best work in context, rather than forcing prospects to evaluate a generic gallery, builds confidence and demonstrates that your team understands their specific content needs.
Prospects at different stages of their digital journey need different conversations. The agent identifies whether a visitor is exploring digital transformation for the first time, evaluating specific solutions, or ready to select a partner. This maturity assessment routes each lead to the appropriate nurture track or direct sales engagement.
Rather than overwhelming visitors with dozens of deals at once, the agent presents tools in a curated sequence based on the buyer's stated interests. This consultative approach mimics the experience of having a knowledgeable sales associate guide a customer through a store, dramatically increasing engagement time and deal discovery.