"AI receptionist" sounds futuristic, but the idea is simple: it's a system that answers your phone for you. It picks up calls 24/7, answers the questions people always ask, takes bookings, and captures the details of anyone you'd otherwise have missed — then follows up. Below is a plain look at what that means in practice and whether it's worth it for a small business.
What an AI receptionist actually is
Think of it as a tireless front-desk person who never sleeps, never takes lunch and never puts a caller on hold. A good one will:
- Answer every call, day or night, including weekends and holidays
- Handle your common questions — opening hours, prices, location, services
- Take bookings and appointment requests
- Capture the caller's details and follow up by text or email so the lead doesn't go cold
The real cost of a missed call
Here's the part most owners underestimate. When a local business doesn't answer, the caller rarely leaves a voicemail and waits. They just ring the next business on the list. That call wasn't a missed message — it was a customer who went to a competitor. For a salon, a trade or a clinic, a handful of missed calls a week can quietly add up to thousands in lost work over a year, and you never even see it happen. The phone ringing out is the most expensive sound in a small business.
How it works, in plain terms
You keep your existing number. Calls you can't answer — or all calls, if you prefer — are routed to the AI, which is set up with your business details, your FAQs and your booking preferences. It speaks naturally, has a real conversation with the caller, does what's needed (answers, books, or takes a message), and sends you the details. You wake up to a list of handled calls and captured leads instead of a row of missed-call notifications. There's no app for your customers to download and nothing for them to learn — to them, someone simply answered the phone.
What it typically costs
Pricing is usually a one-time setup fee to build and tune it for your business, then a modest monthly plan that includes a block of call minutes — far less than employing even a part-time receptionist, and a tiny fraction of a full-time one. Our own plan tiers up automatically in unusually busy months so you're always covered and never get a surprise bill. You can see current pricing and how the AI receptionist works in detail on our AI receptionist page.
Who benefits most
- Clinics and dentists — front desks get swamped, and every unanswered call is a potential booking lost to another practice.
- Salons and barbers — your hands are literally full mid-appointment, so calls go unanswered exactly when people are trying to book.
- Trades on the job — plumbers, electricians and builders can't stop work to answer, and quotes go to whoever picks up first.
In short, it suits any business where the person who'd answer the phone is regularly busy doing the actual work.
An honest look at the limits
It's only fair to be straight about this: an AI receptionist is not a human, and it shouldn't pretend to be one for everything. It's at its best on routine, predictable calls — bookings, FAQs, taking details. For anything unusual, sensitive or complicated, the right setup recognises that and escalates: it takes a message, flags it as urgent, or passes the caller to you or your team. Used that way, it isn't a gimmick replacing people — it's a safety net catching the calls that were going to voicemail anyway. If you expect it to handle every nuanced conversation perfectly, you'll be disappointed. If you want it to stop you bleeding easy, winnable business, it does that very well.
So, does it pay for itself?
Run the numbers for your own business. If your average job or customer is worth, say, £50–£300, the AI only has to save you a small handful of otherwise-missed calls each month to more than cover its cost — and after that, everything it catches is profit you weren't capturing before. For most local businesses with a phone that rings while they're busy, that maths works out quickly. It's less an expense and more an insurance policy against losing customers to whoever answers first.
If you're curious whether it fits your business, the simplest next step is a quick chat — tell us how your calls come in and we'll tell you honestly whether an AI receptionist would help. You can get in touch here.
AI receptionist FAQ
The common questions.
No. A modern AI receptionist uses a natural voice tuned to your business, so callers hear a warm, human-sounding receptionist rather than a flat press-one-for-this menu. Most callers simply experience it as someone answering the phone and helping them.
No. It's not there to replace people — it's there to catch what you'd otherwise miss: the calls that come in while you're with a customer, on the job, or closed for the night. It handles routine calls and bookings and hands the rest to your team, so your staff spend time on the work that needs a human.
A Brickwork AI receptionist is a one-time setup fee, then a small monthly plan that includes a block of call minutes — far less than a part-time receptionist. Busy months tier up automatically so you're always covered and never hit with a surprise bill. Set against the value of the customers it saves, it usually pays for itself quickly.
Free, no commitment
Stop losing customers to missed calls.
Tell us how your calls come in and we'll set up an AI receptionist tuned to your business — so a packed schedule or an after-hours caller never costs you another customer.
Get a free setup call