Case Studies 5 min Jan 07, 2026

How a small bistro stopped missing orders — and started growing

Drowning in calls

Every lunchtime, the phone lines at UrbanBite, a local meal delivery service, went wild.
Most callers wanted the same things — today’s menu, delivery time, and “extra sauce, please” — but with just two operators on duty, calls piled up fast. By the time someone picked up, some customers had already moved to competitors with faster response times.
UrbanBite estimated that over 17% of daily orders were lost simply because no one was free to answer.

A special agent that takes every order

UrbanBite connected Callo’s AI agent to their online ordering system.
Now, when a customer calls, they hear a short IVR menu — “to place an order, press 1” — and are instantly routed to an AI agent that handles everything from menu questions to confirmations.
The AI agent:

  • understands natural speech — “I’ll take two Caesar salads and a lemonade,”
  • checks availability in real time,
  • confirms the order and estimated delivery time,
  • and logs the order automatically in the system.

If something isn’t clear — for example, if a customer asks about allergies or wants to change an address — the agent instantly connects them to a live operator with the order details already on screen.
Within a week, UrbanBite noticed fewer missed calls, smoother workflows, and a lot more satisfied customers.

Before Callo, lunch rush felt like a panic drill. Now, we have much less stress and no lost sales

Marta L., Operations Manager, UrbanBite

After a month with Callo

  • 72% of inbound calls handled entirely by Callo bot
  • Zero missed orders during lunch rush hours
  • 28% growth in total daily orders within the first month
  • Human staff focused on serving customers instead of juggling phones

Read next

[ Product ]

 ]

What is an IVR menu and how It helps your business

What is an IVR menu and how It helps your business

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

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.

How spotting shifting customer sentiment helped

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

When five stars aren’t enough

A hotel chain was getting plenty of star ratings, but no real explanation. Email surveys returned low reply rates and online reviews only showed extremes. The team needed detailed, on-the-record insights across locations — the kind of feedback you can act on — but traditional surveys weren’t cutting it.

When five stars aren’t enough

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

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.

Keep loosing members? Just ask why

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

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

A clinic wanted honest feedback & stopped handing out paper forms

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

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.

How SproutBox validates new ideas in a day

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

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.

A robot that never says “I don’t know”

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

Fixit Garage never missed a call again

Fixit Garage was busy all day — repairing cars, handling paperwork, juggling customer questions. But the real problem started after 6 PM, when the phones went silent in the shop — but not for customers. Drivers stuck on the roadside or clients trying to book a morning appointment were left with voicemail. By the time staff called back the next day, many had already gone to a competitor.

Fixit Garage never missed a call again

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

NetLink kept customers calm during a sudden outage

NetLink, a regional internet provider, had built a loyal subscriber base — until unexpected outages started to cause trouble. Every time a server crashed, hundreds of clients picked up the phone at once. Lines were jammed, support agents scrambled, and the same “What’s going on?” question was answered again and again.

NetLink kept customers calm during a sudden outage

[ Case Studies ]

 ]

TechNova keeps IT teams alert & systems running

TechNova, a fast-growing SaaS company, relied on Slack and email notifications from monitoring tools to inform engineers about outages. But with inboxes overflowing and phones on silent, urgent messages were often missed. Engineers found out about downtime too late — sometimes from angry customers.

TechNova keeps IT teams alert & systems running