AI Answer Call comes out of two decades of marketing for small and home-service businesses, and one stubborn problem no amount of ad spend could fix: the call that goes unanswered.
Dwight Davis has spent more than twenty years in digital marketing, most of it building demand for software and services aimed squarely at small and growing businesses. That includes leading marketing innovation for QuickBooks at Intuit, along with earlier marketing roles at IBM, AT&T, and Xerox.
The throughline across all of it was simple: help good businesses get found and get hired. AI Answer Call is the logical next step, taking the lead a business already worked hard to earn and making sure it never slips away on a missed call. He holds OMCP, Google Ads, and Google Analytics certifications and works out of Boise, Idaho, where the company is headquartered.
After two decades marketing to small and home-service businesses, one pattern was impossible to ignore. Owners spent real money to make the phone ring, and then the phone rang while they were on a roof, under a sink, or with another customer. Voicemail quietly handed the job to the next company on the list.
AI Answer Call was built to close that one gap. Not an answering service that takes a message, and not a phone tree that wears the caller down, but an AI that actually handles the call: answering the question, booking the job, handling the objection, and screening the junk, around the clock. Maya and Cole are what that looks like when it works.
Free for 14 days, then $49 a month. Maya and Cole are answering right now.