Kitchen Design Visit Enquiry Demo
Design visit enquiries can lose momentum if the company does not quickly identify whether the homeowner is ready for a showroom appointment, home survey or design consultation.
The homeowner gets a clearer response about what happens during a design visit and what details are useful before the appointment.
Watch the demo walkthrough
This short video explains what this automation does and why it matters.
Qualify kitchen design visit enquiries by capturing homeowner details, property type, project stage, layout concerns, budget context, preferred appointment timing and follow-up priority.
Please do not enter real customer, patient, client or case information. Use sample data only.
Demo result
Recommended next action
Why this matters commercially
Best conversion angle
Suggested reply
Service interest
Questions the team should ask
Short summary
Confidence
Recommended next action
Quote status
Likely objection
Best follow-up angle
Suggested reply
Internal summary
Questions the team should ask
In a live setup, this could connect to:
- website forms
- shared inboxes
- Google Sheets
- ad lead forms
- internal team alerts
Want this tailored to your business?
Want this connected to your kitchen design visit forms, inbox, calls, chat or campaign leads?
Request tailored demoWhy this workflow matters
A kitchen design visit enquiry is often earlier in the buying journey than a full quote request, but it can still be valuable. The homeowner may not be ready to order yet, but they are actively thinking about layout, storage, appointment timing and whether a showroom or home visit would help. This demo shows how Jemima AI can identify design-readiness and prepare a useful handover for the design team.
- Design visit enquiries can be lost if they are treated as low priority just because the homeowner is still planning.
- Layout and storage problems are often the real reason the homeowner wants advice.
- Preferred appointment times matter because design conversations may need evening or weekend availability.
- A good first response should move the homeowner toward a showroom appointment, home visit or design consultation.
- The AI should organise the enquiry and surface the homeowner’s design problem, while the kitchen company controls advice, appointment slots and design recommendations.
Example workflow walkthrough
A homeowner sends a message saying they are early in the planning stage but want help with a small kitchen and poor storage.
Jemima AI extracts the homeowner’s contact details, property type, project stage, layout concern and preferred appointment timing.
It identifies the enquiry as a design consultation opportunity rather than a simple information request.
It suggests a reply that explains the design process and offers suitable appointment options.
The design team receives a short summary so they know what the homeowner wants to improve before the first conversation.
What the business receives
The kitchen company receives a practical design-visit summary. The team can see that the homeowner is early-stage but engaged, has a specific layout and storage problem, and has given preferred appointment times. This helps the design team respond in a more useful way and move the enquiry toward a consultation without pressuring the customer to buy immediately.
- Property 1930s semi-detached house
- Project stage Early planning
- Main issue Small kitchen with poor storage
- Preferred appointment Saturday or weekday evening
- Contact details captured Email and phone available
- Recommended team action Contact the homeowner to explain the design visit or showroom process and offer appointment options that fit their availability
- Suggested reply Thanks Mark, we can help you explore what may be possible with the layout and storage. A design visit or showroom appointment would be a good next step so the team can understand the space and your priorities. Would a Saturday or weekday evening appointment work best?
How this could be implemented
This can be connected to design visit forms, showroom appointment campaigns, missed call summaries, live chat or kitchen planning inboxes. In a live kitchen company, the workflow should create a design enquiry task, flag project stage and appointment preference, and route it to the design or sales team. It should not provide final layout advice, confirm feasibility, quote prices or guarantee appointment availability automatically.