Zoca runs four AI agents that handle local search, reviews, and customer reactivation entirely on behalf of salons and wellness studios.
ENTRY ANGLES
AI agents that automate outbound sales prospecting and email outreach for service businesses · Inbound inquiry generation and handling platforms for local services · AI-powered CRM lead filling and qualification for small business owners
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI/LLM capability for outreach email writing and lead identification, Local business data access and proximity-based targeting, CRM integration and lead management systems
ZOCA FOUNDER
“improves the business's online visibility by getting its site and reviews to the top of local Google searches in the right area and for the right keywords. Local search is a highly reliable acqui...”
Zoca built a customer acquisition platform for local offline businesses – beauty salons, spas, massage studios, nail salons, barbershops, fitness studios, and other wellness establishments.
The platform currently runs four AI agents.
The first, "Discovery," improves the business's online visibility by getting its site and reviews to the top of local Google searches in the right area and for the right keywords.
Local search is a highly reliable acquisition channel: 88% of searches that include a location and service type – like "find a barbershop near me" – convert to an in-person visit within 24 hours.
The second, "Win," handles incoming customer inquiries through the business's website chat. It answers questions about hours and pricing, and books appointments with the right staff member at a time that works for the customer.
Its main edge is conversion: it doesn't just answer – it sells, describing the experience the customer can expect and surfacing relevant photos to back it up.
The underlying dynamic: most prospective customers reach out to two or three shortlisted businesses at once, then go with whoever responds first and most convincingly. Even a 30-minute delay typically cuts bookings by 50%.
Hiring a human to do this would cost at least $3,000 per month – and even then, no human can respond to every message with the same speed and relevance as an AI, let alone do it around the clock.
The third, "Loyalty," re-engages existing customers by sending personalized messages at well-timed intervals. A couple of weeks after a haircut, for instance, the AI sends a gentle reminder that it might be time to come back in – with a one-tap booking link.
Returning customers are the most valuable segment. Half of them are willing to try something new on a return visit, which typically means they spend 67% more per visit than a first-time customer. And a loyal regular brings in an average of three to four new clients through word of mouth.
The fourth, "Social," handles the business's presence on social media by composing and scheduling posts – which the owner can review and edit before publishing.
What makes this agent more than a scheduling tool is that it monitors which posts actually drive customer visits, then uses that data to optimize future content – adjusting visual style, messaging, and calls to action.
This matters because 83% of prospective customers check a business's Facebook and Instagram posts before deciding whether to visit – and a strong social presence can double the number of bookings.
Zoca launched last year and has already signed up more than 1,000 businesses, generating over 120,000 bookings and more than $10 million in revenue for its clients.
On the strength of those results, Zoca just raised its first funding round of $6 million, led by Accel.
The post Zoca published announcing its funding is practically a manifesto for anyone building marketing infrastructure for small local businesses.
Traditional marketing advice fails small business owners. The standard playbook – "post more on Instagram," "learn SEO basics," "manage your Google presence" – assumes time that owners don't have. Most are already working 60 hours a week just keeping the business running.
As a result, small businesses lose out to larger competitors that can afford dedicated marketing staff. That has to end today, because AI agents can now do all of this for them.
These aren't tools that require learning. They don't try to turn a salon owner into a marketing expert. They don't suggest what to do. They just do it.
Small business owners don't need dashboards to interpret and act on. They need their phones to ring and their appointment books to fill.
That's what the agents do. They work autonomously. They work while owners are busy with other things – or asleep. They grow the business even when there's no time for marketing.
Which is why Zoca describes itself not as a software company but as the creator of an army of AI agents fighting 24/7 for its customers' growth, while those customers focus on keeping the business running.
One Zoca client reported going from three or four customers a day to having more demand than she could handle – all within a single month. No new marketing knowledge required. No new tools to master. She connected Zoca, and growth happened on its own.
Within five years, no local business that doesn't use an AI marketing platform running around the clock will be able to compete. The question isn't whether to adopt AI – it's which platform to use. And the answer will inevitably favor platforms that deliver results without requiring the owner to understand how they work.
Zoca isn't building a software company. It's leading a marketing revolution that's inevitable on this market – and it won't stop until it owns it.
Cohesive ([related review](/review/sdelaj-to-bez-chego-oni-ne-smogut-obojtis)), currently in Y Combinator, is building an "automated growth platform for local businesses" with a different target segment: owners of home services businesses – HVAC, plumbing, roofing, painting. Cohesive assumes those owners have no time for marketing and handles outbound for them: the AI identifies nearby companies and homeowners likely to need their services, writes outreach emails, and fills the CRM with leads the owner can follow up when ready.
Cohesive automates outbound sales. Zoca generates and handles inbound inquiries. Different mechanics, same principle – stop asking small business owners to do marketing. Give them tools that do it for them.
Building those tools – whether as platforms, AI agents, or something else entirely – is the core direction here.
The market is enormous. There are roughly 35 million small businesses in the US – 99.9% of all American companies.
The beauty and wellness local services segment that Zoca targets alone is worth $750 billion. The total US local services market reached $3.3 trillion in 2023 and is projected to approach $10 trillion by 2032.
AI is coming to this market. The only question is which platforms small businesses will adopt. The answer is obvious: the ones that don't require owners to become marketing experts. Simply because they don't have the time – and never will.
Which, incidentally, confirms a point from the previous review: startups don't have to replace workers. They can do for their users what their users simply don't have time to do. Especially for small businesses and solo operators, that principle works remarkably well.