If you've looked into solving the after-hours missed call problem, you've probably come across two options: hire an answering service, or use an AI voice agent. Both answer your phone when you can't. But the similarities end there.
Here's the honest breakdown of both — what they cost, what they actually do, and which makes sense for a home service business in 2025.
What Answering Services Actually Do
A traditional answering service employs human operators who answer your calls using a script you provide. They can take a message, relay basic information, and sometimes transfer urgent calls. They're available 24/7 and they're human — which sounds like a plus.
In practice, the limitations are significant:
- They work from a script — they can't answer questions about your pricing, availability, or specific services
- They can't book appointments directly into your calendar
- They can't qualify leads or assess urgency accurately
- They cost $200–$500/month for basic coverage, more for high call volume
- Customers often know they're talking to a call center, which creates friction
- There's no CRM integration — messages arrive by email or text to you, requiring manual follow-up
What AI Voice Agents Do Differently
A modern AI voice agent — like the one built into Afterburner Systems — is trained specifically on your business. It knows your service area, your pricing range, your available appointment slots, and how to handle common scenarios in your industry.
When a customer calls, the AI:
- Answers within 2 rings, every time, in your business name
- Holds a natural, conversational back-and-forth — not a phone tree
- Qualifies the lead: what's the issue, how urgent, what's the address
- Checks your calendar and books the appointment directly
- Sends the customer a confirmation text
- Sends you a full call summary and transcript via SMS
- Syncs everything to your CRM automatically
The key difference: An answering service takes a message. An AI agent closes the loop — the customer hangs up with a booked appointment, not just a promise that someone will call them back.
When Answering Services Still Make Sense
There are scenarios where a human answering service is the right call — particularly for high-complexity, high-stakes interactions where nuance matters. A medical practice, a law firm, a crisis situation. For these, human judgment is valuable.
For a plumber, HVAC tech, roofer, or landscaper? The interaction is almost always the same: what's wrong, when can you come, how much will it cost. An AI handles this better than most answering service operators because it's trained specifically for it and never has an off day.
The Bottom Line
For home service businesses, AI voice agents win on every metric that matters: cost, consistency, CRM integration, and booking rate. The only argument for an answering service in 2025 is familiarity — some business owners just feel better knowing a human answered. But that comfort comes at double the cost and a fraction of the capability.