Every call your firm missed today was a PNC who called someone else tonight.
It is happening as often as it is.
First Chair AI answers the phone. Not sometimes, every time.
The call that comes in at 9:00pm on a Tuesday is the same call that comes in at 9:00am on a Wednesday.
An AI voice agent that knows how to have the intake conversation.
Answers immediately.
Knows how to have the intake conversation.
Gathers the caller’s name, contact information, the nature of their matter, and any other information your intake process requires.
Answers common questions.
About your firm, your practice areas, and your process, accurately, in your firm’s voice.
Always on.
Routes calls appropriately.
When a caller needs to reach a specific person or department, it routes them, without dropping context.
Information goes where it should.
Does it actually sound like a person?
The question we hear most often is the right one to ask. First Chair AI does not sound like a phone tree. It does not sound like a recording. It is conversational, warm, and able to handle natural back-and-forth, the way a call actually goes when someone is nervous or isn’t sure what to say first.
It does not recite a script at the caller. It listens, responds, and guides the conversation toward what the firm needs to know.
The goal is a caller who hangs up feeling heard, not transferred, not processed.
This concern is worth taking seriously. Here is the plain answer.
A phone tree with more steps.
Robotic prompts. Confusing menus. “Press 1 for…”. The kind of voice assistant that existed five years ago and still haunts the perception of every AI phone product.
If that were what First Chair AI was, no one would deploy it. The technology has moved past that.
A natural conversation, calibrated to your firm.
The voice is natural. The conversation is adaptive. When a caller says something unexpected, First Chair AI does not repeat the same prompt, it responds to what was actually said.
Most callers describe the experience as professional. The only thing that registers as unusual is the speed.
“If you try it and it’s not right, we fix it.”
What attorneys ask before they realize how many calls they've already lost.
If it answers every call, what happens when a caller figures out they're talking to AI?
What if a caller has a complicated situation and goes off-script?
Can it handle calls for multiple practice areas, or just one?
What does my intake team actually receive after a call?
What stops it from saying something wrong about my firm or my practice?
Does it give legal advice?
What happens to the call data? Who owns it?
We already have a receptionist. Why do we need this?
How long does it take to set up?
What if it's not working the way we want after it's live?
What does First Chair AI actually sound like?
What happens to calls that need to reach a specific person at the firm?
How does First Chair AI handle a caller who is in distress?
First Chair AI is not a standalone answering service.
Forward Push only works with firms on retainer. First Chair AI comes as part of that relationship. If you are looking for a standalone AI answering service, that is a different conversation with a different company.
If you are looking for Case Gravity, a system where every touchpoint is aligned and every lead has somewhere to land, this is what that looks like.
The four AI components of the system.
The call that comes in at 9:00 pm on a Tuesday is the same call that comes in at 9:00 am on a Wednesday.