What is an AI SDR — and do small businesses actually need one?
AI SDRs are moving from enterprise sales teams to local businesses. Here is what the term means in plain English and when it is worth it.
- AI SDR
- sales
- explainer
SDR stands for Sales Development Representative — traditionally a person who qualifies inbound leads and books meetings for a sales team. An AI SDR automates much of that work on your website and contact channels.
More than a chatbot that says hello
A basic chatbot greets visitors. An AI SDR is tuned for outcomes: understand the enquiry, ask follow-up questions, decide if it is a fit, and secure a booked appointment or a clean handover to you.
Why the idea is spreading beyond SaaS companies
Enterprise teams adopted SDR workflows years ago because speed-to-lead mattered. Trades, clinics, salons, and agencies face the same physics — just with smaller teams and no dedicated sales floor.
- You are losing enquiries because replies are slow
- You want bookings, not just contact form entries
- You cannot justify a full-time receptionist yet
- You need after-hours coverage without checking your phone all evening
When you do not need one
If enquiry volume is genuinely low, or every conversation requires deep human judgment from the first message, automation may add little. But if missed enquiries are a recurring problem, an AI SDR is often cheaper than another hire — and it never clocks off.