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Comparisons

Answering service vs. AI receptionist: which fits a 5-person shop?

2026-04-23 · 7 min read · By Asad Mohammad

A 5-person plumbing operation has three trucks, a dispatcher who also does invoicing, and an owner who's still on his tools most days. They miss enough calls that they finally decide to fix the phone situation. The shortlist comes down to two options: hire a human answering service that's been around for decades, or layer an AI receptionist onto the existing line. Both can technically handle the inbound. The decision usually comes down to one feature only one of them has.

This post is about that feature. Call-answering quality isn't the deciding factor (both are competent). Price math matters but doesn't settle it either. The real decision driver is the bidirectional owner-side AI, and no human answering service has anything like it.

What a human answering service is built to do

A traditional answering service is an inbound-only product. The customer calls your forwarded number, a human receptionist picks up, follows your script, takes the message, dispatches the lead to you. That's the loop. It's a clean, mature product. Smith.ai, Ruby Receptionists, AnswerConnect, PATLive, and Abby Connect all do it well in slightly different flavors.

The economics: per-minute billing against a monthly bucket, starting around $250-$329/month for the smallest tiers and scaling up by call volume. A 5-truck shop pushing 150 calls a month at 4-minute average will run around $450-$700/month depending on which vendor.

The product loop is one-directional in a specific way that matters. The receptionist talks to your customer when your customer calls in. The receptionist does not talk to your customer when YOU want to send a message to your customer. That second direction is a thing you need, often, in service-business operations. And no human answering service offers it.

The bidirectional gap

Here's the operational scenario. A plumber is finishing a job in Mississauga at 1:47pm. He's running late for his 2pm appointment in Etobicoke. The customer at the 2pm needs to know. The plumber doesn't want to dial her directly because he's still in the previous customer's basement and his hands are full. He texts the office: "Tell Janet I'll be there at 2:30."

If the office is a human dispatcher, the dispatcher reads the text, dials Janet, leaves a message, sends a text. Done in 30 seconds.

If the office is a human answering service like Ruby or Smith.ai, the situation breaks. The receptionist on your account is configured to receive inbound calls from your customers. They're not set up as an outbound communication relay for you. You can't text "Tell Janet I'll be there at 2:30" to Smith.ai's number and have them pick up the phone and call Janet on your behalf. That's not what they sell. Their product is inbound, not bidirectional.

This isn't a hypothetical edge case. For a 5-person plumbing operation without a dedicated dispatcher, customer-facing communication during the workday is a constant. The owner and the lead tech are both on tools. The two helpers are out on jobs. Someone needs to relay "running late," "we're 10 minutes out," "the part we need is back-ordered, we'll come Thursday," "we found something extra in the basement, can we extend by an hour" multiple times every day. Without a dispatcher, that someone is the owner, while he's still under a sink.

Related reading
  • What a good AI receptionist should refuse to do
  • After-hours call answering: in-house, service, or AI?
  • The case for flat-rate pricing on call answering

What an owner-side AI does instead

Avidra's bidirectional AI is the feature that closes that gap. The owner can text or call the Avidra number with natural-language commands and the AI handles the customer-relay side.

"Text Mike I'll be there in 10 minutes" → the AI sends an SMS to the customer Mike on the owner's behalf, from the same number the customer originally called.

"Transfer me to Mike" mid-call → the AI routes the call from the Avidra number to Mike's contact.

"How many leads today" → the AI pulls the account data and texts back the count.

"Reschedule the 3pm to Thursday" → the AI moves the booking on the connected calendar and sends a confirmation text to the customer.

This isn't a chatbot doing general assistant work. It's a scoped business AI that handles dispatch and customer relay, plus account info on demand. Asking it to order Wolseley supplies or book a personal dentist appointment gets a polite refusal. Asking it to handle the customer-facing communications a 5-person service business generates is exactly what it's built for.

Why no human service can match this

A human receptionist could, in theory, relay messages on the owner's behalf. The reason no answering service offers it: the per-minute billing model doesn't fit. Sending 30 outbound texts a day on behalf of the owner would generate enormous billable minutes from the receptionist's side without a customer call ever happening. The service would either lose money or charge a fortune. AI doesn't have that economic constraint.

The two-direction product

For a small shop without a dedicated dispatcher, the two-direction product is the structural advantage.

Inbound side: customers calling get a competent AI receptionist that captures their intake, qualifies the lead, books appointments into the connected calendar, and posts the captured lead to the owner's dashboard. This is what every AI receptionist does. Avidra handles it via configurable scripts. Rosie and GoodCall ship their own takes on the same workflow. Smith.ai does it through their human team rather than AI.

Outbound/owner side: the owner can text or call the Avidra number with natural-language commands and have the AI act on his behalf. This is what only some AI receptionists do at all, and what no human answering service does.

The combined effect is that a 5-person shop without a dispatcher can run as if it had one. The math against hiring a dispatcher ($35-$55K/year fully loaded) shifts. The math against paying a human answering service ($450-$700/month for inbound-only) also shifts.

The decision framework

The decision between a human service and an AI for a 5-person shop usually walks through three questions in this order.

How much of your operational work is owner-to-customer relay? If the answer is "a lot" (most service businesses without a dispatcher), the bidirectional AI side wins decisively. Human services can't match it.

How much of your inbound is complex enough that AI fumbles? If the answer is "most calls are routine intake" (true for trades), AI handles it cleanly. If the answer is "most calls are nuanced legal-intake conversations," a human service is closer to the right tool.

What's your seasonality and call-volume variance? If your phone volume swings (HVAC peak weeks, roofing storm events, plumbing emergency clusters), flat AI pricing absorbs the variance. Per-minute human service pricing punishes it. If your volume is steady year-round, either can work.

For most 5-person trades shops, the answers come out the same way. Lots of owner-to-customer relay work during the workday, mostly routine inbound that doesn't need a polished human voice, and seasonal call volume that punishes per-minute billing. The structural moat is the bidirectional capability, not any single one of those three.

Pricing math for a 5-person shop

Avidra Pro at $49/month handles inbound AI receptionist plus owner-side bidirectional AI plus appointment booking plus emergency detection. The /pricing page payback is 6 months against a $250 default service ticket. One captured job pays for 6 months of the subscription.

The same shop on a Ruby 200-minute plan pays $720/month for inbound-only human answering service. No owner-side AI. No bidirectional relay. The price is roughly 15x the Avidra Pro tier for less product surface.

This isn't a fair comparison on every axis (Ruby gives you a polished human voice on every call, which has real value for some businesses). It is a fair comparison on the dispatcher-replacement axis. The 5-person shop that's deciding "do we hire a dispatcher or use software" has a real tool option in the AI side that has no equivalent in the human-service side.

When the human service is still right

To be honest about the edge: the human answering service is still the right answer for some businesses.

A 5-person concierge medical practice. Every inbound call is a $500+ consult inquiry that needs a polished human voice for trust reasons. The bidirectional owner-side AI is irrelevant because the physicians don't relay messages to patients via dispatcher in the first place. Smith.ai or Abby Connect (Human plan) wins.

A boutique law firm of 5 partners doing high-end estate planning is the same logic. Every call is a multi-thousand-dollar engagement. The human voice is the brand. The AI relay isn't a need.

The pattern: when the dispatcher-relay workload is small (because the business doesn't generate customer-facing comms during the workday) and the brand value of human voice is high (because every call is high-stakes), human service wins. That's a minority of 5-person businesses, mostly in professional services.

The honest summary

For most 5-person trades shops, an AI receptionist with bidirectional owner-side capabilities is the right answer. Dispatcher-replacement alone justifies the math against either hiring a person or paying a human answering service. Inbound call quality is competent enough for routine trades intake, flat pricing absorbs the seasonal swings that punish per-minute billing, and the owner gets to stop being a phone relay while still in customer basements.

For a small set of professional-services 5-person shops, a human answering service is still right. Brand voice matters more than dispatcher replacement, and the relay workload is small enough that owner-side AI isn't decisive.

You can read the category comparison of human answering services, the side-by-side against Smith.ai specifically, or jump straight to pricing. The bidirectional owner-side AI is the feature that closes the dispatcher gap. That's the real argument, not the call-answering quality or the per-minute math.