1What Will Be Running In Production, And By When
Ask exactly what will be live and usable, and by what date, rather than accepting a description of possibilities. A serious agency will name a specific workflow, a voice receptionist booking real jobs, a quoting tool drafting real quotes, with a real go-live date, not a roadmap of vague future phases.
2How Will Success Be Measured
Ask how they will measure whether the work succeeded: hours saved per week, invoices collected faster, calls answered that would otherwise be missed. If the answer is vague or focused on activity rather than outcomes, that is worth noticing before you commit budget to it.
3Have You Built This For A Trades Business Before
Ask directly whether they have built for trades or construction before, and ask for a specific, checkable example, not a generic case study. The industry has particular patterns, after-hours enquiries, site photo quoting, H&S documentation, and an agency that has actually solved these before will talk about them specifically rather than in the abstract.
4What Happens To Calls And Data Outside Business Hours
Ask what happens to an enquiry that comes in at 10pm on a Saturday, since around 38% of trade enquiries land outside standard hours. A good answer describes exactly how the call or message is captured, stored, and handed to a human the next morning, not a general assurance that it is handled.
5Who Owns The System Once It Is Built
Ask plainly who owns the system, the data, and the account once the engagement ends, because some agencies build on infrastructure that locks you in and makes leaving expensive or impossible. You should own your customer data and be able to walk away with it if the relationship does not work out.
6How Does This Fit My Existing Tools
Ask how the proposed system will connect with the accounting, scheduling, or CRM tools you already use, rather than requiring you to rip out and replace everything at once. The best implementations sit alongside what already works and only replace the specific, broken piece.
7What Is The Smallest First Workflow You Would Ship
Ask them to name the smallest possible first workflow they would ship, not the biggest. An agency that wants to start with one well-scoped piece, invoice chasing, or after-hours call capture, and prove it works before expanding, is behaving like a craftsperson rather than a salesperson.
8How Do You Handle Mistakes The AI Makes
Ask what happens when the AI gets something wrong, a missed detail on a quote, a booking error. A credible agency will have a clear answer involving human review points and fallback processes, because pretending the system will never make a mistake is itself a red flag.
9What Does This Cost Beyond The Build
Ask for the full cost picture, not just the build fee: ongoing hosting, model usage costs, support, and what happens if you want changes six months in. Surprise costs after signing are one of the most common complaints about AI vendors, and a straight answer up front avoids that entirely.
10Can I Talk To A Client Doing This Today
Ask to speak with, or at least see verified detail from, a real client using the system today, ideally in a similar trade. An agency confident in its work will make this easy; one that stalls or offers only polished testimonials without specifics is worth a second look.
The right questions separate agencies who ship production systems from agencies who ship pitch decks, and it is worth taking the time to ask them before signing anything. Kiwi Dynamics welcomes every one of these questions because production AI, not slideware, and hours actually given back are the whole point of how we work with New Zealand and Australian trades businesses.