The after-hours call that would've gone to voicemail
For a dental clinic or small practice — one front-desk line, no after-hours coverage.
It's 9:14pm. A patient calls about a tooth that's been aching for three days. There's no one at the front desk, so the call goes to voicemail — and most people who hit voicemail just hang up and call the next clinic.
One way it plays out
- An AI receptionist answers, and asks what your front desk would — name, reason for calling, how urgent it sounds — a real conversation, not a recording.
- It checks your actual schedule and books the slot — against your real openings, in the practice software you already use, updated the same way the front desk does during the day.
- What happens next depends on urgency — a call that sounds urgent is flagged to a real person right away, not queued for morning; a routine booking gets a text or email confirmation. Either way it's logged: who called, what they needed, what happened.
That's one way it plays out — the questions, the urgency rules, and how bookings confirm get shaped around how your front desk runs.
So by the time the front desk opens, the 9:14pm tooth-pain call already has an 8am slot booked — waiting for a two-second confirmation, not a callback that might never happen.
Works for: dental clinics, med spas, and medical practices.
Everything stays on servers here in Canada, and once it's built the whole thing is yours to keep — not a subscription, and not tied to anyone's platform. I'm here in Winnipeg: I set it up, and I stay with you and your team until it's running the way you want.
Curious how it's built? Technical breakdown available on request.