Most "AI" hands your existing team a faster tool — the same process, the same headcount, a manual screwdriver swapped for an electric one. We do the other thing: we take one job a small business runs on people — the front desk, intake, scheduling, dispatch — and turn it into an operation that runs itself.
We don't make the step faster. We remove the need to staff it.
The same worker, the same line, each station faster. It feels like progress and changes almost nothing — because the work was never the hard part. Answering a phone isn't hard. The friction was always between people.
The work happens on its own. That's what we build. For a small operator the expensive constraint isn't the task — it's the human dependency itself: the owner who personally is the front desk at 9pm, because the role can't be staffed and can't be skipped.
We sell the removal of that dependency. No one stands at the station — the work simply runs.
We pick a single job a small business runs on people — the front desk, intake, scheduling, dispatch — and rebuild it as an operation that runs itself. The people who stood at each station are replaced by autonomous machinery.
We don't make your team faster; we remove the need to staff the step.
Lobby is an after-hours AI voice front desk for owner-operated Australian motels on Little Hotelier. Today the owner is the night front desk — or pays for a receptionist they can't afford. Lobby runs the whole after-hours workflow lights-out.
Picks up after hours and quotes real, live availability — straight from the motel's own system.
The guest self-pays on the motel's own page. Lobby never touches payment.
Never touches paymentWith an owner-tap required before any door opens.
Owner-tap before accessWho hears about it in the morning — not at 11pm.
A paid direct booking with no OTA commission skimmed, the guest let into their room, and a front desk that no longer needs a person standing at it overnight. An operator watches every call.
A missed call at 11pm, turned into a paid booking and a guest asleep in their room — without anyone being woken.
The moment AI touches a step, it touches someone's job. So the org settles for the only outcome it can stomach: everyone keeps their station, everyone gets a screwdriver. The line is defended, not removed.
Where the role is the owner themselves, or one they can't afford to fill. No colleague's job is being protected. The owner actively wants the dependency gone. That's the difference between "AI transformation" that stalls and a floor that actually goes quiet.
We take one niche at a time and go all the way to the floor of it. A few carefully chosen bets, not a feature factory.
Each thing we build generalises by configuration. The second customer is a setup, not a rebuild — not a bespoke engagement that dies when we leave.
We never touch the customer's money. On anything that moves money, inventory or access, we're more conservative than a person would be. The system fails loudly, never silently — it pages us before the customer feels it.
Two to three ex-startup operators who've built before. No coordination drag, deep ownership, real craft in what ships.
We work with small operators where one function leans on a single person — usually the owner — and that dependency has become the ceiling. If that's you, or you partner with businesses like that, we'd like to hear the shape of the problem.
Tell us about the job that runs on one person, and where it breaks.
hello@audevelopers.comIf you build for, or work alongside, small operators like these — let's talk.
partners@audevelopers.com