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Nettieis the AI receptionist for small businesses that can't afford to miss another lead. She picks up on the first ring, books appointments, takes messages, and stays polite at 2 a.m. — for less than a week of a human answering service.
Best-fit workflows for Nettie right now
Nettie picks up on the first ring, 24/7 — with the warmth of a great receptionist and the patience of a machine. She books, takes messages, and hands off to you only when it matters.
Use Nettie for narrow outbound workflows first: qualification, callback routing, or one specific offer to one specific list. Sell the pilot, not the fantasy.
Answer after-hours calls, catch overflow, gather context, and route the next action. This is the fastest path to revenue because the value is obvious and the workflow is bounded.
A receptionist layer for businesses that lose money when the phone rolls to voicemail. Start with one line, one script, and one clear success metric.
The browser demo is live today, and the phone bridge can place real test calls. That is more credible than marketing a fictional platform.
Nettie is strongest today when you stay narrow: US-English pilots, one workflow, one number, and one definition of success.
Scripts, agent voice, and test calls can be managed from the console while the rollout is still operated carefully by humans.
The right promise is a fast managed pilot, not fake instant self-serve onboarding. Buyers trust honest timelines more than flashy nonsense.
Nettie already logs calls, outcomes, and transcripts where configured. That is enough to review a pilot, improve scripts, and tighten handoffs.
No pretending the company is already enterprise-complete. Nettie should sell the workflows it can support today, then earn the right to expand.
The right sequence is scope, script, test call, then rollout. Nettie is better when it behaves like an honest operator than a fake no-touch platform.
After-hours receptionist, overflow support, or one outbound list. Narrow beats broad when you want the first pilot to work.
Nettie configures the voice, opening line, and prompt around your exact script instead of dumping you into an unfinished self-serve builder.
Call your own phone, hear the agent, and make the awkward parts obvious while the blast radius is still tiny.
Look at the call logs, tighten the script, and then decide whether to widen the rollout. Expansion should be earned by evidence.
Retell, Vapi, and Bland are strong components if you want to build. Nettie should win when the buyer wants a managed rollout on one workflow instead of another internal software project.
Nettie’s edge is not magic voice research. It is packaging a narrow real workflow into a pilot a buyer can understand and approve.
A human SDR costs $6,200/month fully loaded — salary, benefits, tooling, ramp, and the CEO's time interviewing replacements. Nettie runs the same motion for the cost of a coffee per conversation.
"If the product is still early, the best sales move is to run one narrow workflow really well instead of pretending you already support every enterprise edge case."
"After-hours reception is the obvious wedge because every missed call already has a dollar value attached to it. That makes the pilot easy to approve."
"The browser demo gets attention. The real phone bridge closes trust. The operator console is what lets you improve the workflow instead of just showing a flashy demo."
Nettie is not pretending to be finished self-serve SaaS. These are managed pilot packages built to get you onto real calls quickly and expand only after the numbers make sense.
Prove one workflow on real calls.
Run meaningful call volume.
Expand once the pilot proves out.
For teams with procurement and security review.
Nettie picks up every one — at 2 a.m., on weekends, while you're under a sink. Most pilots are answering live calls within 48 hours. Hear her first, then decide.
On call 24/7 · Books appointments · Pilots from $199/mo