AI receptionist

A receptionist
for the hours your team cannot cover cleanly.

This is Harbor's strongest wedge today. For service businesses, a missed call is already lost revenue. That makes a receptionist pilot easier to buy, easier to measure, and easier to improve.

"If the phone rolls to voicemail after 5pm, you already know the value of an after-hours receptionist pilot."
Best
Harbor wedge
Simple
ROI story
Fast
sales cycle
Best next step
Pilot

Start with one workflow, run real test calls, review the logs, then decide whether the rollout deserves more volume.

Hear it live

What this agent actually does

Friendly first answer

Give callers a human-sounding greeting instead of voicemail or a brittle phone tree.

Collect the basics

Name, callback number, service need, urgency, and any qualification details your team actually needs next.

Route the follow-up

Decide whether Harbor should reassure, schedule, or escalate to a human based on the workflow you are piloting.

Work from one number first

The cleaner the surface area, the faster the pilot stabilizes.

Use real test calls

This is where the current Harbor product is already credible: real phone demos and a working operator loop.

Expand by service line

Once one script works, widen coverage intentionally instead of pretending the stack is universal.

HS
Ideal buyer
Owner-operator with missed calls
Receptionist coverage is the easiest Harbor story to believe because the missed-call problem is already obvious before the product shows up.
Clear
buyer pain
Simple
pilot scope
Real
test calls
Strong
expansion path
FAQ

Questions people actually ask.

Good enough to demo and good enough to pilot, but not magic. The right promise is a real browser demo, a real callback demo, and iteration on the live workflow instead of inflated benchmark claims.
That is exactly why Harbor is strongest as a managed pilot. Start with bounded workflows, keep a human in the loop, review the call logs, and tighten the prompt before expanding.
Twilio and the current Harbor console are real. Broader integrations should be sold carefully based on the actual workflow in front of you, not a giant fake checklist.
The honest answer is: do not oversell compliance before the product earns it. Harbor should currently be positioned around the use cases and operational controls it can support today, with trust work still in progress.
Those platforms are components for builders. Harbor’s near-term advantage is not pretending to out-feature them; it is packaging one real workflow into a pilot a buyer can approve without starting a software project.
Then you should widen the rollout only after the pilot proves out operationally. Selling mythical 10,000-call concurrency before the basics are locked is how trust dies.
Yes. The live demo page gives you a browser call now, and the callback demo can place a real US test call through the Harbor bridge.
After-hours receptionist and inbound overflow for service businesses. That wedge has the cleanest ROI story and the least product fiction around it.
Get started

Start with the AI workflow
that can make money today.

Harbor should win one real workflow first: after-hours reception, inbound overflow, or a narrow outbound test. Request a pilot, run real calls, and expand from evidence.

Real browser demo · Real callback demo · Managed rollout