Your calendar is not a walk-up counter.
An agent meets every visitor, understands what they're looking for, answers from your content, and shares your booking link only with the people you actually want to see.
Set up with you — on your offers, your criteria, your voice.
Three discovery calls this week. None should have been one.
The first couldn't afford the program. The second wanted the course, not the coaching. The third came fishing for free advice — and got it. Ninety unpaid minutes, and every one of those three people would have been better served by an answer in two minutes than a call in two weeks.
That's what a booking link as a front door does: it outsources qualification to your own attention, and it tells everyone the same thing — that your time is self-serve. The point isn't fewer calls. It's calls that start in the right place, with the right people.
Every visitor gets a real conversation.
Which offer fits their situation, what it costs and why, what the next step is — routed against your fit criteria: budget floor, readiness, profile.
Your published content works for you.
The advisor agent answers from your articles, guides and FAQ, and names its sources. People who came to browse leave with an answer signed by you. A separate agent, placed on your content pages — same dashboard.
The booking link becomes an earned outcome.
Fits get it in the agent's closing message, with a brief already written. Non-fits leave with a useful answer and a polite no. You open your calendar to people worth your time — and it shows.
The brief is the product.
Chatbots route. Forms collect. Pepline writes. Every completed conversation compiles into a brief: profile, offer match, budget, seriousness signals, recommendation. You read it in a minute — before opening your calendar to anyone.
And when the profile doesn't fit, the brief never exists: that person got a useful answer and a polite no, and your week never heard about it.
Generate one about your own situation →Employee in career transition, logistics sector, 12 years of experience. Goal: launch an independent consulting practice by January.
Arrived via the positioning article; had the online course in mind, but their need — six months of support, first client before March — matches the 1:1 program.
Comfortable with the range mentioned for the program; asked whether a three-instalment plan exists — question left open.
Already has a written offer and two lukewarm prospects; looking for structure, not motivation.
Profile fits — booking link shared in the closing message.
Three answers grounded in your published content — positioning, pricing, first client.
This is the shape of the brief the agent produces.
We set it up with you.
No template picker, no 40-node flowchart. Your agent starts as a working session with us, on your offers and your content — then the criteria, the voice, and the boundaries stay yours to edit from the dashboard.
We read your offers and your content with you.
Your programs, your prices and the why behind them, your articles and guides — most of what the agent needs to know already exists somewhere in your work.
We configure the routing criteria and the voice.
What maps to which offer, what earns your calendar, how it sounds — yours, not a bot’s.
The widget goes where “Book a call” used to be.
And the advisor goes on your content pages, if you want it. Two agents, one dashboard.
Your attention is the product.
An open calendar says otherwise. A filter says your time is earned — and the people you want as clients are exactly the ones who understand that.