
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 SOP platform buyers are motivated by compliance requirements like ISO 9001, FDA 21 CFR Part 11, or SOX. The agent identifies compliance-driven prospects and routes them to sales reps who specialize in regulated industries, ensuring the conversation addresses audit readiness and documentation standards from the start.
Software companies often sell multiple products or tiers. The agent maps each prospect to the right product based on their stated use case, team size, and feature requirements. This segmentation means your sales team spends time pitching the right solution rather than conducting broad discovery.
The agent identifies which social platforms the prospect cares about most, whether that is Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, or a multi-platform strategy. It can then route leads to the specialist within your agency who handles that platform, reducing handoff time and improving the quality of the initial sales conversation.
The agent identifies whether a founder is at the idea stage, pre-revenue, or post-revenue, and adjusts the conversation accordingly. Pre-seed founders see information about mentorship and workshops, while later-stage startups learn about growth acceleration, investor introductions, and scaling resources.
The agent identifies which of your sales services each prospect needs, whether that is outbound prospecting, sales training, CRM implementation, or revenue consulting. It then routes the lead to the specialist team for that service line, reducing response time and improving close rates.
Sales engagement platforms must integrate seamlessly with the buyer's existing CRM, email, and communication tools. The agent captures the prospect's full sales technology stack, identifying which integrations to highlight during the demo and surfacing potential compatibility concerns before they become deal blockers.
The agent helps prospects articulate which processes are candidates for automation by presenting common use cases organized by department (finance, HR, operations, IT, customer service). This structured approach often helps prospects identify additional automation opportunities they had not considered, expanding the scope of the potential engagement before the first conversation.
Retail technology associations serve two distinct audiences: vendors selling retail solutions and retailers buying them. The agent handles both audiences within a single deployment, routing each through a conversation path tailored to their goals. This eliminates the need for separate intake processes and ensures every visitor finds the right engagement path.
Property managers, brokers, and developers speak different languages and have different priorities. The agent adapts its vocabulary and focus areas based on the prospect's segment. A property manager hears about maintenance workflows and tenant portals. A brokerage hears about CRM features and transaction management. This contextual awareness improves engagement and builds credibility.
Process management software applies across dozens of use cases: project approvals, change management, quality control, incident tracking, and compliance workflows. The agent identifies the prospect's specific use case early in the conversation, ensuring they see relevant examples and value propositions rather than generic product messaging.
The agent guides prospects through a discovery process that maps their current grantmaking workflow, from application intake to award disbursement to compliance reporting. This helps prospects self-identify which modules of your platform address their specific bottlenecks, whether that is slow application review cycles, manual compliance tracking, or disconnected reporting.
Payment processing pricing is volume-dependent, and merchants care about rate structures above all else. The agent captures monthly transaction volume and average transaction size to determine which pricing tier applies, ensuring your sales team can present a relevant rate sheet from the first conversation. This transparency accelerates the evaluation process.
Energy procurement value is directly tied to consumption volume. The agent captures kWh usage, demand charges, and facility count to estimate the prospect's annual energy spend. A manufacturing plant consuming 500,000 kWh monthly represents a fundamentally different opportunity than a small office, and the agent flags high-value accounts for priority follow-up.
CRM buyers are almost always evaluating alternatives. The agent captures which competing platforms the prospect is considering or currently using, giving your sales team critical competitive context. Knowing a prospect is migrating from a legacy CRM versus evaluating two modern platforms changes the demo strategy entirely.
The agent classifies inquiries by service type: ocean freight, air freight, road transport, warehousing, customs brokerage, or multimodal solutions. This classification ensures that inquiries reach the right team immediately, whether that is your ocean freight desk, air cargo specialists, or customs compliance department.
The agent speaks the language of life sciences: GxP, 21 CFR Part 11, ICH guidelines, EU Annex 11, quality management systems, CAPA processes, and validation protocols. This domain-specific terminology builds immediate credibility with quality directors and regulatory affairs professionals who can instantly tell whether a vendor understands their compliance world.
The agent adapts its language and examples based on the prospect's industry. A healthcare company hears about HIPAA-compliant lead capture. A SaaS company hears about demo booking funnels. This contextual awareness demonstrates your agency's cross-industry expertise during the first interaction.
If your company offers multiple software products or modules, the agent routes prospects to the specialist team for the product they are evaluating. A prospect interested in your analytics module goes to your data team; someone exploring your ERP solution goes to your enterprise sales team. This eliminates the friction of being transferred between departments after initial contact.
Enterprise IT consulting firms typically operate across multiple practice areas with dedicated teams. The agent identifies the prospect's technology need and routes them to the correct practice lead. A prospect asking about Azure migration goes to your cloud team; someone concerned about SOC 2 compliance goes to your security practice. This precision routing eliminates internal handoffs that slow down the sales cycle.
The agent uses terminology that insurance professionals expect: policy administration systems, FNOL workflows, bordereaux reporting, rating engines, and agency management. This industry-specific language builds credibility with prospects who can immediately tell whether a vendor understands their operational world.
Infrastructure and renewable energy firms often serve multiple verticals: utility-scale solar, distributed generation, wind farms, EV charging infrastructure, water treatment, transportation, and grid modernization. The agent classifies each inquiry into the correct service line from the first interaction, ensuring visitors see relevant project examples and case studies rather than generic corporate messaging. This classification accuracy matters because a municipal water authority and a commercial solar developer have fundamentally different evaluation criteria.
The agent categorizes incoming inquiries by project type, construction phase, and service needed. A developer seeking pre-construction cost estimates gets a different conversation flow than a homeowner requesting a renovation budget review. This classification ensures prospects receive relevant information and your team receives properly segmented leads.
The agent maps prospect responses to specific solution modules within your portfolio. If a prospect mentions customs compliance challenges, the agent surfaces your trade compliance tools. If they describe shipment visibility gaps, it highlights your supply chain tracking capabilities. This intelligent matching reduces time-to-relevance in the buyer journey.
Full stack agencies often offer frontend development, backend engineering, DevOps, UX/UI design, and QA testing as distinct service lines. The agent identifies which services the prospect needs and can route them to the appropriate team lead, whether that is a design director for a rebrand or a CTO for a complex SaaS architecture project.