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What is an IVR menu and how It helps your business
[ Case Studies ]
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How FreshHomes doubled sales efficiency by spotting real buyers
FreshHomes, a home renovation company, ran large-scale ad campaigns that generated hundreds of daily inquiries. On paper, it looked like success — but sales reps were drowning. Most inquiries were “just curious”, and reps wasted hours chasing people who had no budget or no real intent to buy.
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Beauty salon chain turned one-time visitors into regulars
GlowUp Beauty ran dozens of salons across the city. They were not struggling with quality — clients loved the treatments and often left glowing reviews. But life gets busy: people forget to rebook, put off self-care, or wait for a “special occasion”. As a result, chairs stayed empty more often than they should
[ Case Studies ]
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Keep loosing members? Just ask why
FitZone Gym noticed a worrying trend: more and more members were canceling their subscriptions after just a few months. Exit surveys sent by email went mostly unanswered, and front desk staff rarely asked people leaving for their real reasons. The management team was left guessing — was it pricing, equipment, or maybe poor class scheduling? Without clear answers, they couldn’t stop the churn.
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A robot that never says “I don’t know”
TechHouse is a consumer electronics retailer that prides itself on fast service and expert advice. With dozens of daily inquiries — from “Is this model in stock?” to “Can I return a purchase?” — the phone was their main sales and support channel.
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How SproutBox validates new ideas in a day
When you sell meal kits, trends move fast. SproutBox’s marketing team had plenty of ideas—new recipes, bundle offers, a “family night” plan—but email polls took weeks and social votes were noisy. By the time answers arrived, the moment (and the budget) had moved on.
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[ Case Studies ]
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A clinic wanted honest feedback & stopped handing out paper forms
For years, BrightSmile Dental relied on paper surveys left at the reception desk. Most patients were in a hurry to leave, and only a handful bothered to fill them out. Even those who did were often polite rather than honest. The clinic had no real way to know what patients truly thought — or why some never booked a follow-up
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How spotting shifting customer sentiment helped
Apex bank, a mid-sized regional bank, had solid client retention. But leadership felt uneasy. Competitors were rolling out flashy mobile features, and rumors suggested younger clients were considering switching. The bank’s standard quarterly surveys didn’t reveal much — customers mostly ticked “satisfied” and left no comments.