
In AI agent for businesses is not just a modern chatbot. When set up correctly, it acts as a digital colleague that can answer common questions, gather the right information, guide users and take the strain off repetitive administrative tasks. For companies that already operate digitally – for example, with contracts, logbooks, projects, document signing or customer support – an AI agent can be the difference between more manual, time-consuming tasks and a workflow that actually scales.
At Boomr, we specialise in digital administration for businesses: digital driving log, digital signature, contracts and project workflows. That is why AI agents are a natural progression. The aim is not to replace people, but to remove friction from the tasks that are repeated every day.
An AI agent is a system that can act more independently than a traditional chatbot. It can interpret a question, understand context, apply relevant knowledge and guide the user to the next step. The difference lies in the task: a chatbot often answers one question at a time, whilst an AI agent can work towards a goal.
For businesses, this might involve qualifying an enquiry, gathering information ahead of a meeting, helping a customer find the right department, drafting a document, organising a case, or forwarding the relevant documentation to the right person. The agent doesn’t need to be spectacular to add value. It is often the mundane, repetitive tasks that have the greatest impact when they are automated in a controlled manner.
Many companies have already digitised parts of their day-to-day operations. They use systems for contracts, time reporting, logbooks, projects, finance, CRM and support. The problem is that a great deal still falls between the cracks: enquiries via email, manual follow-ups, information that needs to be copied, customers who need guidance and internal teams who have to answer the same questions over and over again.
That is where an AI agent is most useful. It can act as an initial point of contact between the user and the team. It responds to predictable queries, gathers any missing information and hands over when the query requires human expertise.
| Work steps | Without an AI agent | With an AI agent |
|---|---|---|
| Frequently asked questions | The team responds manually each time | The agent gives the initial reply straight away |
| Gathering of supporting documentation | The customer receives follow-up questions by email | The agent asks the right questions right from the start |
| Internal administration | Information is transferred manually between steps | The agent organises and summarises |
| Customer experience | Please don’t reply until someone has time | 24-hour support for simple enquiries |
Boomr has developed an AI agent in collaboration with sharks. The aim is to reduce the burden of repetitive administrative tasks and make it easier to assist customers quickly within digital workflows. The agent is not intended to replace expert knowledge, but rather to take the first step: understanding the query, guiding the user and gathering relevant information.
This is an important principle. An AI agent is at its most effective when it has a clear role. In Boomr’s case, this involves reducing friction around enquiries, processes and administration. In other companies, the same model can be used for customer service, quotations, bookings, internal support, onboarding or sales preparation.
Automation usually follows fixed rules: if something happens, do this. An AI agent can handle more variation. It can understand a question phrased in different ways, choose the right course of action and formulate a response that suits the situation.
That doesn’t mean everything should be left to chance. On the contrary, a good AI agent needs clear guidelines. It needs to know what it is allowed to respond to, when to ask for more information, and when to hand over to a human. For businesses, control is at least as important as intelligence.
The most common mistake is to start on too grand a scale. An AI agent should not be expected to solve the entire business from day one. Start with a clearly defined area where the benefits are clear and the risks are low.
The best initial version is often simple: an agent that answers the most common questions, gathers the necessary information and forwards the correct details. Once it is up and running, it can be integrated more closely with the company’s systems.
AI agents are particularly well suited to businesses that have frequent contact with customers or internal users. These may include SaaS companies, service providers, tradespeople, accountancy firms, consultancy firms, membership organisations and companies that handle a large volume of contracts or project administration.
What they have in common is that the information is often available, but people still need to spend time finding, formulating and sending it. An AI agent makes that knowledge more accessible, without the team having to respond manually every time.
An AI agent for businesses is a digital colleague that can answer questions, gather information, guide users and carry out routine tasks based on clear rules and knowledge of the business.
A standard chatbot usually answers simple questions. An AI agent may have a clearer remit, use the company’s information, follow processes and guide the user through a workflow.
Companies that deal with a large number of recurring queries, administrative tasks or manual follow-ups often benefit most from AI agents, particularly in the areas of SaaS, customer service, finance, contracts, support and project management.
No. The best use is usually to take the pressure off the first stage: answering common questions, gathering information and referring cases on when human judgement is required.
Would you like to see how an AI agent works in practice? Read the customer case study on how Haien built a AI agent for Boomr, or find out more about AI agents for businesses at Haien.



