Just Tell Us What You Need
We replaced the menu of features with a single box. Say it in plain words — Alex makes the calls.
For the last year, using Callomat started with a question you had to answer before the AI ever did anything: what kind of errand is this?
Is this a “Find Stock” task or a “Find Help” task? A booking, or a search? You’d pick a category, choose a business type, fill in the fields, and then hand it off to Alex Parker, our AI agent.
It worked. But it always bugged us. Because you don’t think in categories. You think in sentences.
“Can someone find me a pharmacy that still has cold medicine?” “I need a table for two tonight.” “There’s water under my sink and I need a plumber, fast.”
So we rebuilt the front door around the way you actually talk. Today, Tell Us is live for everyone at callomat.ai
One box, any errand
There’s just one thing on the home screen now: a box that says “Tell me what you need.”
You type it. Or you tap the microphone and just say it. No menu, no form, no deciding in advance which “feature” your problem belongs to. Alex reads the sentence and figures out the rest.
Real things people type into it:
“Can you book a table at a restaurant in Berlin for dinner tonight?”
“I need to find a pharmacy nearby that has cold medicine in stock.”
“Please dispatch a plumber to fix a leak in my kitchen urgently.”
“I’d like to book a beauty appointment at a salon this evening.”
“Can you check if any cafes near me have almond milk?”
Five completely different jobs — a booking, a stock hunt, an emergency dispatch, an appointment, a quick question. One box handles all of them. Your first call is on us, and results usually land in minutes.
It listens. Then it makes a plan.
Here’s the part we’re quietly proud of.
When you hit send, Callomat doesn’t just fire off a phone call. It stops and thinks out loud — with a little personality. (”Sharpening my please-and-thank-yous…” is one of our favorites.) And it shows you a plan before it touches the phone network:
Got it — working on your request.
Confirm with you
Call the business
That order matters. Nothing gets dialed until you’ve seen the plan and said go. Tell Us is fast, but it’s never sneaky.
It turns a sentence into a plan
Under the hood, Alex takes your messy, human sentence and quietly turns it into a precise mission.
Say “book a table for two at an Italian restaurant tonight around 8pm,” and by the next screen it has extracted:
Looking for → a table
Party → 2 people
Date → tonight
Every one of those is right there on the confirmation card, and every one is editable with a single tap. Got the party size wrong? Fix it. Want tomorrow instead of tonight? Change it. You’re never trapped by what the AI thought you meant — you get the last word before anyone picks up the phone.
You approve. Then it dials.
For a call-around job, the confirmation card lays it all out before you commit:
“We found 10 restaurants near you.” A map shows the search area, with a radius you can widen from 1 km all the way to 10 km.
“We’ll call them until one can help. We stop as soon as one says yes.”
Cost: 1 credit — for all the calls. Not per call. One price to solve the whole errand.
And when Alex gets someone on the line, there’s no pretending. He opens every call by saying he’s an AI assistant phoning on your behalf. We think that’s the only honest way to put an agent on the phone with a real human being — and it’s non-negotiable.
You can finish with a free account (one tap, and it remembers you next time) or just continue as guest if you’re in a hurry. Either way, your first call is free, and after that you pay with credits — no card, no SMS code to re-enter.
The same box knows a booking from a hunt
Here’s the subtle magic: you never have to tell Callomat which “mode” to use.
Ask it to book a specific restaurant, and it makes the one call and books your table. Ask it to find something — a medicine, a plumber, “any Italian place with a table tonight” — and it lines up a queue of businesses and calls around until one says yes, then stops.
That decision — call one place, or call around many — used to be your job, made by picking the right feature off a menu. Now it’s Alex’s job, made by reading your sentence. There is no “Booking app” and “Find Nearby app” anymore. There’s just: tell us what you need.
Still like to browse?
Some errands start with a craving, not a sentence. If you’d rather scroll a neighborhood — restaurants, pharmacies, locksmiths, hair salons near you — Discover is one tap away under “Browse places instead.” Tell Us is the fast lane; browsing is still there when you want to window-shop the real world.
The real world, in one sentence
We started Callomat to kill hold music. Tell Us is the next step: killing the setup too. No categories to learn, no forms to fill, no deciding what kind of problem you have before you’re allowed to solve it.
Just say what you need. Alex makes the calls. You get the answer.



