Your clients are already asking you for AI answering, AI receptionists, AI chat. Verlingo is the product you hand them: voice and chat agents you provision, configure, and resell under your own brand - with the platform, telephony, and model costs handled for you.
Every local business you serve has the same phone problem, and this year they're all asking the same question: "can AI answer for us?" The partners who can say yes - with a working product - win the retainer. The ones who can't watch someone else sell it into their accounts.
You already run their marketing, their phones, or their IT. When they want an AI receptionist, you're the first call - and "let me look into it" is how that budget ends up with a stranger.
Telephony, barge-in, latency, per-vertical scripts, escalation rules, call summaries, a client dashboard - it's a product company's roadmap, not an agency project. Resell one that already runs over a million conversations a month.
A logo refresh ends. An ad campaign pauses. The thing answering your client's phone at 2 AM does not get cancelled - it compounds into the kind of recurring revenue that makes an agency sellable.
We're not handing you a PDF and a login. Your first client deployments get the same white-glove build we give our own customers - so you learn the platform on real accounts, not sandbox demos.
Tell us who you serve and how many clients you could bring. We'll walk you through the platform, agree on partner pricing for your volume, and set up your workspace.
We build the first agents alongside you - knowledge base from the client's site, their greeting, their transfer and escalation rules - and go live together. You watch once, then you own the playbook.
Clone what works. A proven "dental front desk" or "HVAC after-hours" configuration becomes your template - provisioned per client from the dashboard, or programmatically through the API.
Resell under your brand at your price and keep the margin, or refer the deal to us and take 20% of every invoice for the client's first two years. Either way, the revenue renews monthly.
Some partners want the client relationship, the branding, and the margin. Others just want to hand off the deal and collect. Both are real programs - and you can run different models for different clients.
You buy platform usage at partner rates, package it however you like - setup fee plus retainer is the classic agency play - and invoice the client yourself. The client is yours: your contract, your support relationship, your markup.
Not every partner wants to run deployments. Introduce us, we handle the demo, the build, the billing, and the support - and you earn 20% of every invoice that client pays for 24 months, subscription and usage alike.
The best partners aren't salespeople - they're the trusted vendor a business already pays every month. If that's you, you're not opening doors; you're walking through ones you opened years ago.
You generate the leads - then a third of them ring a phone nobody answers. Close the loop you're already paid to open: the agent books what your campaigns produce, and the report proves both halves.
You installed the phone system; now every client asks what's next for it. AI answering is the upsell they're requesting by name - sold on infrastructure you already manage.
You build workflows and CRMs for local businesses - the phone is the last unautomated channel in every stack you touch. Add the agent, wire it to the systems you built, own the whole loop.
Your users run their businesses in your product - and still miss the calls that feed it. Put an agent in front of your platform via API and every call becomes a record in your system.
Your margins are payroll-bound and your nights are your hardest shifts to staff. Put agents on the routine volume, keep your humans on the judgment calls, and quote 24/7 without 24/7 headcount.
If your clients serve Spanish-first, Portuguese-first, any-language-first customers, you're selling a differentiator nobody local can match: 25+ voice languages, 100+ on chat, summaries in English.
When you white-label something, its failures wear your logo. Verlingo handles over a million conversations a month across production voice and chat deployments - verification-gated lines, live payment transfers, hard escalation rules - and your clients run on the same platform.
Two models. Resellers buy platform usage at partner rates, invoice their clients at whatever price they set, and keep the difference - you own the billing relationship entirely. Referral partners introduce the client, we close and bill them directly, and you receive 20% of every invoice that client pays - subscription and usage, net of refunds - settled monthly, for 24 months from their first paid invoice. The same terms go in writing before your first deal.
Not if you don't want them to. Web chat is fully white-label on partner plans - your logo, your colors, no badge - and phone callers just hear the greeting you configure. Resellers invoice under their own brand. If you'd rather co-sell openly with us instead, that works too; it's your account strategy.
In the reseller model, you do - your contract, your pricing, your support front line, and the workspaces sit under your partner account. In the referral model, we do - the client signs with us, and your revenue share is tied to that account for the full 24-month term. We don't poach reseller clients; that's in the agreement, not just on this page.
No. The dashboard is point-and-click - knowledge base from the client's website, greeting, hours, transfer rules - and your first client builds are done with us on white-glove onboarding calls. The API is there for partners who want to automate provisioning at volume, not as a requirement.
Provision and configure agents programmatically: create a client workspace, load its knowledge base, set routing and escalation rules, attach numbers. Partners running many similar clients typically build one intake form that spins up a templated agent per signup.
No fee to apply and no seat you have to buy before your first client. Partner pricing is scoped to the volume you can realistically bring - one pilot client is a fine start; the margins improve as your book grows.
No - referrals have to be arms-length: businesses you don't own, operate, or share ownership with, and not accounts already talking to us (there's a 90-day attribution window). Self-referrals don't earn commission; that's in the agreement. If you're a single business looking for the best rate, you don't need a program for that - the published tiers on the pricing page already scale with volume.
Resellers are the first line for their own clients, with priority access to us behind them - you're never left holding a platform issue alone. Referral clients are supported by us directly. Either way, platform, telephony, and model operations are our job, not yours.
Yes - your price list is yours. Most partners anchor against what the client is already paying: a human answering service bills per minute and a receptionist is a payroll line, so there's room to price well above your cost and still save the client money.
Yes, and bring us in early. Regulated deployments run through our enterprise track - compliance guardrails, audit trails, BAAs where required - and we'll scope it with you rather than have you promise controls solo. Your revenue model doesn't change.
Weeks, not quarters - often days for a straightforward business. Knowledge base from their site, greeting and routing rules on the onboarding call, numbers pointed or ported, live. Your second client is faster than your first, and your tenth is a template.
Apply with the client you'd launch first. We'll scope your partner pricing, build that first agent together, and you'll have something live to sell against - usually within weeks.
Apply to partner