Affordable, scalable, and easy-to-integrate solutions designed for small businesses. Choose the plan that fits your needs and start your journey today—no complex setup or large upfront costs, just seamless performance.
£230 per month
1,000 agent minutes per month
Up to 2 concurrent agent sessions
Standard pre-built agents
Human transfer
Up to 10 concurrent calls
Email support (48-hour response)
Standard integrations
Calls transcribed
Voice Agent overage £0.21 per minute
No contracts - cancel anytime
£430 per month
2,000 agent minutes per month
Up to 5 concurrent agent sessions
Voice Agent overage: £0.20 per minute
Advanced pre-built agents
Detailed analytics and reporting
Advanced integrations
whatsapp & sms
Custom agent configuration
No contracts - cancel anytime
Starting £820 per month
4,000+ agent minutes per month
50 concurrent sessions
Voice Agent overage: £0.19 per minute
Custom agent development
Full API access
Advanced security features
24/7 dedicated support
Custom integrations
No contracts - cancel anytime
Voice technology has matured beyond virtual assistants and IVRs. The next wave — agentic voice AI — is intelligent, proactive, and already reshaping how small businesses connect with customers.
In 2024, talking to a machine is no longer novel.
We’ve all interacted with voice systems — from Siri and Alexa to clunky customer service menus. But for businesses, the real promise of voice AI has been harder to pin down.
According to a recent Gartner report, the industry is finally crossing that threshold. Voice AI is no longer just a passive tool that listens and replies. It's becoming agentic — able to understand context, make decisions, and act on behalf of a business. The potential impact is profound, especially for SMEs operating with lean teams, high customer volumes, and limited admin bandwidth.
“Voice AI is moving from a reactive channel to a proactive partner,” the report states, citing agentic systems’ ability to handle multistep tasks, update external systems, and even orchestrate follow-up actions across channels.
This evolution opens the door for something previously out of reach for many small businesses: a responsive, intelligent front desk that never sleeps, never forgets, and always answers.
While the US market has seen aggressive uptake of voice AI in sectors like e-commerce and healthcare, the UK has lagged slightly — not due to lack of interest, but lack of fit.
“A lot of AI tools are built for the American enterprise model,” says Antony Slack, founder of Edinburgh-based startup scotsphere AI. “They’re powerful, but they assume you’ve got tech teams, big budgets, and the appetite for complexity.”
Slack’s company is part of a growing cohort of UK-based innovators responding to that gap — building voice-first platforms tailored to small business realities.
His team focuses on service-based sectors: law firms, clinics, tradespeople — the kinds of businesses that rely on inbound calls to drive revenue but often miss them because they’re doing the work itself.
Traditional voice systems (think IVR menus or voice-to-text tools) function as digital notetakers. Agentic AI, by contrast, acts.
scotsphere AI’s platform can:
Answer calls in real time
Understand the nature of a customer enquiry
Book appointments directly into calendars
Update CRMs or booking systems
Escalate complex queries to a human when needed
And it does all this with natural, human-like speech, trained to reflect UK tone and pacing.
“We’ve moved beyond ‘Press 1 for bookings,’” Slack explains. “Our voice agents can handle nuanced conversations and follow through on real-world tasks — just like a staff member would.”
According to scotsphere AI’s own Analysis, missed inbound calls represent a consistent and preventable source of lost revenue across UK SMEs.
In law firms, for example, 45–60% of new business comes via phone enquiry. For salons and trades, that number can be even higher.
But owners often don’t answer — not because they don’t want to, but because they can’t. They’re with clients, in meetings, completing mandatory training, on-site, or simply unavailable.
“It’s not about replacing people,” he says. “It’s about making sure no lead goes unanswered.”
Gartner’s report also notes a key limitation of earlier voice AI platforms: siloed experiences.
“Without integration into external systems,” the analysts write, “voice AI can feel like a dead end.”
scotsphere’s team took that lesson to heart. Their platform is built to integrate with:
Google Calendar and Microsoft 365
Clio (for legal)
Fresha (for salons and clinics)
Bespoke booking and CRM systems
What this means for the business owner: calls aren’t just answered — they’re actioned. Bookings are confirmed. Data is logged. The customer journey continues, even without staff intervention.
There’s a cultural dimension too.
“The tone, the phrasing, the expectations of politeness — UK callers notice when something sounds ‘off,’” Slack notes.
That’s why scotsphere AI is investing heavily in voice training data and conversational modelling. The goal is to make interactions feel local, warm, and personal — even when handled by an AI.
With development anchored in Scotland, the company also brings a regional sensitivity often missing in global platforms.
Gartner projects that by 2026, over 30% of customer service will be handled by conversational AI — up from 15% in 2023.
But Slack believes the real tipping point will come not from enterprise adoption, but from small business success stories.
“When the local solicitor starts winning more clients because they never miss a call…
When the salon owner sees no-shows drop because their AI confirms bookings in real time…
That’s when you’ll see mass adoption.”
For many SMEs, voice AI won’t be a novelty — it’ll be a necessity. And platforms like scotsphere AI are making sure it’s ready when they are.
© 2025 scotsphere.ai All Rights Reserved