Why we lead with law firms
The 7-in-1 AI receptionist works for any local business that lives on inbound calls. But it is not worth the same to all of them. A recovered call is worth far more to a divorce attorney than to a plumber or an event vendor, because a single case is worth so much more. That is why the first campaign leads with divorce and family-law firms: the same product, aimed where it saves the most money and closes the easiest. Every number below is from the case study you shared plus published industry benchmarks, with the working shown.
The value of the AI receptionist is the value of the leads it saves. So the question is simple: when a firm recovers a missed call and wins the client, what is that client worth? Here is one new client, by vertical, at conservative figures.
One law firm client is worth roughly three to twelve times a client in the other verticals
A divorce case at a conservative $4,000, and contested cases run far higher, dwarfs a plumbing job, a new dental patient or an event booking. The AI receptionist recovers the same missed calls in every vertical, but each one it saves for a law firm is worth the most. That makes legal both the easiest firm to show a return to and the strongest ROI story we can tell.
This is not theory. The family-law case study you shared shows the receptionist moving the exact metrics that turn a missed call into a signed case. These are the numbers from your write-up.
Held to an honest standard
These are the figures from your case study, shown as illustrative results rather than an audited average, which is exactly how we would present them to a prospect. The point they prove is directional and solid: the receptionist answers faster, catches the after-hours enquiries a firm was losing, and turns more of them into booked consultations.
Here is how one recovered call becomes about a thousand dollars, line by line, at conservative benchmark inputs. Nothing is asserted, every step is shown, and a firm can plug in its own numbers on the call.
Value of one recovered legal lead
The calls are already coming in
A small family-law firm takes roughly 80 inbound enquiries a month, and about 30 to 40 percent are missed or hit voicemail, heavier after hours and at weekends. That is the leak, and it exists before we change anything.
The receptionist catches them, your case study shows it
Cutting missed after-hours enquiries by the 63 percent in your case study recovers several genuine new-client calls a month that were going to voicemail and then to a competitor.
Each one is worth about a thousand dollars
At a 25 percent sign rate and a conservative $4,000 case, each recovered lead is worth about $1,000, and a firm with higher-value contested cases sees multiples of that. A handful a month is real money.
Because one recovered case is worth so much, the receptionist does not need to be perfect to pay for itself. It only needs to save a few calls a year.
Two or three saved cases a year covers everything
At about $900 a month the receptionist costs roughly $10,800 a year. Two to three recovered cases at $4,000 each cover it entirely, and everything above that is profit the firm was leaking to voicemail. For a divorce attorney, one missed high-intent intake can be worth more than a whole month of the service, so the risk sits on the side of doing nothing.
Highest value per recovered lead
One law firm client is worth three to twelve times a client in the other verticals, so every call the receptionist saves returns the most. The value story is simply easier to make land.
The most urgent inbound of any vertical
Someone facing a divorce or an injury does not leave a voicemail and wait. They call the next firm on the page within minutes, so instant 24/7 answering matters more here than almost anywhere else.
Already your number one ICP
Divorce and family law sits at the top of your target list, and the campaign is scraping and reaching these firms from Monday. Leading with legal is not a detour, it is the plan, backed by the numbers.