Avidra vs Hiring an In-House Receptionist
The promise
If Avidra doesn't recover 3 booked jobs in your first 30 days, I refund everything and disconnect you myself.
No forms. No retention call. No retainer.
Asad, founder
The promise
No forms. No retention call. No retainer.
Asad, founder
Sometime around the fourth truck, every service-business owner asks the same question. We're missing too many calls. We need somebody at a desk. Maybe a part-time hire, maybe a kid out of school looking for an office job. Then somebody on a Facebook group mentions AI receptionists, and the decision gets harder. Do you spend $40K a year on a human being or $1,500 a year on a software subscription?
This page is the head-to-head for that decision. Hire vs. install. It's a real fork in the road and the right answer depends on what your business actually needs from the receptionist seat.
Pick Avidra if all you need is somebody (or something) to answer the phone, capture the lead, and book the job. That's a software problem now. A full-time receptionist costing $35-55K/year is more capacity than the phone-answering job actually requires.
Pick an in-house hire if you need someone who also does the rest of the front-office work. Walk-in customers, supplier ordering, scheduling, customer follow-ups, dealing with the accountant. A real person earns out when the phone is one of many things they do, not the only thing.
A receptionist hire is a W-2 employee (or 1099 in some setups) who sits at a desk and answers the phone during business hours. They take messages, transfer calls, sometimes book jobs, and handle whatever else lands in front of them. Loaded cost in the US and Canada usually runs $35-55K/year for a single person doing residential service intake. That includes wages, payroll taxes, benefits, and the desk-and-software stack they need.
Avidra is an AI receptionist that picks up missed calls, texts the caller back from your existing number within 5 seconds, captures intake over SMS, and books jobs into a connected calendar. Flat monthly pricing, typically well under $200/month for a small shop. No payroll, no PTO, no sick days, no holiday coverage gap.
The categorical bet is different. A hire is a person doing many things. Avidra is software doing one thing well.
| Feature | Avidra | In-House Receptionist Hire |
|---|---|---|
Picks up missed calls 24/7 | Yes | No (business hours only) |
Works weekends and holidays | Yes | No (without overtime or second hire) |
Texts caller back from your line | Yes, under 5 sec | Possible but inconsistent |
Cost per year | ~$1,500-3,000 | $35,000-$55,000 fully loaded |
Handles walk-ins | No | Yes |
Orders supplies and runs errands | No | Yes |
Customer relationship over time | Limited (data-driven) | Yes (real human) |
Sick days, PTO, holidays | n/a | Yes |
Training time | 30-45 min | Weeks to months |
Performance review needed | No | Yes |
Scales with call volume | Yes (no cost change) | Requires second hire |
Best for | Missed-call layer | Full front-office role |
A real person at a desk does a lot of things AI doesn't. Walk-in customers get a face to talk to. Suppliers calling about a delivery get sorted out without going through a script, and the accountant who needs last quarter's expense receipts gets them handed over the same day. The phone is one channel among many that a competent office person manages.
Customer relationships are the other big one. A receptionist who's been at your shop for three years knows that Mrs. Henderson is the long-time customer who calls every six months about her garbage disposal, and she knows the contractor across town who's always cranky but pays fast. That accumulated relational knowledge is real. It shapes how customers feel about doing business with you. AI doesn't have an equivalent.
Judgment calls also favor a hire. A new caller asking for a quote on a $40K commercial job needs to be routed to you, not booked into a Tuesday afternoon slot. A homeowner crying about a flooded basement needs different handling than a tenant calling about a routine maintenance question. A human reads the room.
Last: a receptionist is a person who can grow with the business. Today they answer phones. In two years they might be running dispatch or working into an operations role. AI doesn't have that career-path optionality. The seat doesn't promote anyone.
The pure phone-answering job is a software problem now. If the only thing you'd hire a receptionist to do is take messages on inbound calls, you're paying $40K+/year for a function Avidra does for under $2K/year. The math doesn't compete.
The 24/7 coverage is the other big differentiator. A hire works 40 hours a week. That's 168 working hours a month against a 720-hour month. Avidra works all 720, including weekends, holidays, and 3am emergencies. To match that with humans, you'd need 3-4 hires on rotating shifts, which most small shops can't justify.
The response time also favors AI. A receptionist takes a message and follows up later. Avidra texts the homeowner back from your number within 5 seconds, while they're still looking at the search results page. That speed converts more leads than any human staffing model can sustain.
Finally: hiring is hard. Finding the right receptionist takes weeks, training takes more weeks, and turnover is a real risk in the first year. Avidra is live the same day. If it doesn't work out, you cancel. No severance, no rehire cycle.
A clean comparison: $42K/year for one daytime receptionist vs ~$1,500-$2,500/year for Avidra. The 28x cost ratio is real. The question is whether the human does enough other work to justify the spread. If the only job is phone-answering, the answer is no for most small shops. If the job includes walk-ins, supplier coordination, and front-office management, the answer can be yes.
A 6-person plumbing operation with a small office where supplier deliveries arrive twice a week and walk-in customers occasionally show up. Phone is busy but isn't the whole job. A part-time receptionist at $20K/year handles the front desk while Avidra catches after-hours and overflow missed calls. Both. The human and the software cover different shifts and different tasks.
A 2-truck electrician with no physical office, working out of trucks and homes. No walk-ins, no supplier delivery desk, no front-office work. Just calls coming in while the owner is in someone's basement. Avidra is correct. A receptionist hire would be paying $40K for something the software handles for under $2K.
A 4-location dental group with established front desks at each office. The receptionists handle in-person check-ins, insurance verification, and scheduling. The phone is part of their day but not the whole day. After-hours missed calls go to voicemail. The right move is to keep the hires and add Avidra for after-hours only. They complement.
A growing roofing company. One owner, one foreman, four roofers. No office. Phone is the only inbound channel. Owner wants to hire a receptionist but can't justify $40K against current revenue. Avidra is the right interim answer. When the business scales to needing a real office in 12-18 months, revisit.
If you're paying $40K/year for someone whose main job is answering the phone, the math has gotten worse than it used to be. Avidra handles the phone-answering for a fraction of the cost. Then decide whether the rest of the front-office job is big enough to hire for.
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