Keir AI App
Keir lets you run everyday business and marketing tasks by saying what you need in plain English. Add contacts, send follow-ups, request reviews, book appointments, create invoices, post content, and update your CRM without clicking through dashboards.

Direct Answer
Keir is an AI business assistant for small business owners. It connects to your marketing and operations tools so you can ask for work in normal language and have Keir handle CRM tasks, emails, texts, appointments, invoices, review requests, social posts, and follow-up actions.
Keir turns “I need to follow up with everyone from yesterday” into action. It is designed for busy owners and teams who need more done without more software confusion.
Plain-English Commands
Keir is built around natural language, not menus. If you can say the task, Keir can help move it forward.
“Add John Smith to the CRM and tag him as a roofing lead.”
“Text everyone who requested a quote this week and ask if they have questions.”
“Send review requests to customers marked job complete.”
“Find an open slot Friday afternoon and schedule Sarah for a consultation.”
“Write a Facebook post about our summer service special.”
“Show me leads that have not been contacted in three days.”
What Keir Can Do
Create contacts, update records, tag leads, check pipelines, and assign next steps.
Send emails, texts, review requests, reminders, and appointment messages.
Draft posts, campaign ideas, email copy, offer copy, and simple content prompts.
Create invoices, schedule appointments, summarize notes, and surface missed tasks.
Ask what leads came in, what needs attention, and where follow-up is falling behind.
Use Keir as a plain-English layer over CRM and automation workflows.
Infographic
Use plain English by chat or voice.
It identifies the task, customer, and needed tool.
CRM, automation, messages, calendars, and workflows update.
Review, approve, and track what was done.
FAQ
Ready to Work Faster?
Ask us how Keir fits into your CRM, marketing system, and daily operations.
Ask About Keir →