Sector fit

AI intake systems built for legal firms, clinics, immigration consultants, and specialist service businesses.

IXIA is designed for high-consideration services, not commodity e-commerce.

Legal & Tax

Legal, tax, and advisory

Buyers compare firms, ask nuanced questions, and often arrive when risk is already high. Quick, confident intake wins trust.

  • Complex inquiry routing by service line
  • Fast first response without generic fluff
  • Follow-up after consult and proposal
Request a legal intake audit →
Immigration & Education

Immigration and education

Many prospects need eligibility clarification before they are ready to book. Intake quality matters as much as speed.

  • Qualification checkpoints
  • Structured document and status requests
  • Sequenced follow-up for hesitant leads
Request an immigration intake audit →
Healthcare

Clinics and specialist care

Missed calls and front-desk overload can quietly choke growth. IXIA helps capture demand when the team is already busy.

  • Missed-call response logic
  • After-hours intake capture
  • Booking-ready information collection
Talk to us about patient intake →
Local Services

High-value local services

Contractors, consultants, premium education, and niche service operators often underwork their existing inquiries.

  • Source-specific scripts
  • Lead prioritization
  • Operational visibility into next actions
Get a leak map for your service →

Start with a free Revenue Leak Map.

The lowest-friction offer on purpose. It creates a real conversation around money leakage, not around trendy tooling. We take 2–3 new engagements per month to keep implementation quality high.

Not sure if IXIA fits your business?

If you spend money getting leads — through ads, referrals, reputation, or inbound content — and sometimes wonder where some of them go, IXIA probably fits. The fastest way to find out is a free leak map. It takes 10 minutes and gives you a number to work with.

Get a free leak map Send a brief instead

Or read how operators fix their intake chains: Read the blog →