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BackMIT Engineer Builds Billion-Dollar Company on Missed Calls with AI
MIT Engineer Builds Billion-Dollar Company on Missed Calls with AI
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Times of India5h agoBusiness3 min readIndia

MIT Engineer Builds Billion-Dollar Company on Missed Calls with AI

Quick Look

  • Apurva Shrivastava, an Indian-origin MIT engineer, co-founded Avoca with Tyson Chen, an AI answering service for home businesses.
  • The company, valued at $1 billion, uses AI voice agents to book appointments and follow up on leads, addressing the critical issue of missed calls for small contractors.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Apurva Shrivastava and Tyson Chen, MIT graduates, founded Avoca to solve the problem of missed calls for small businesses, particularly in the home services sector.

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Apurva Shrivastava (Image generated using AI)

Take a look at your phone right now. How many missed calls do you see? For most of us, that’s just a number sitting on the lock screen. But for Apurva Shrivastava, an Indian-origin man, that number turned into a business model from which he built a company now valued at close to 8,300 crore rupees.

Meet Apurva Shrivastava, the MIT engineer who built a career on missed calls

Apurva Shrivastava grew up in Michigan, where his parents ran a small business. As a teenager, he would help them. It was during this time that he noticed how every missed call was a job walking out of the door. The customer would call someone else and, just like that, it would affect their business. Shrivastava studied computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). In 2022, he co-founded Avoca with Tyson Chen, a fellow MIT graduate whom he met during a poker night. Chen’s mother ran an acupuncture practice in Pennsylvania, and he also knew what a missed call meant for business. They had both lived different versions of the same problem as children answering phones for family businesses that could not afford to lose a single lead. So they attempted to build an AI answering service for restaurants. “When a restaurant misses a phone call, that’s a $30, $40 order,” Chen told Fortune. “When a home service business misses a phone call, that could be a $30,000–$40,000 HVAC install they’re missing. So, instantly, we thought: ‘Wait, this is a completely different order of magnitude.’” They spent an afternoon with Rescue Air and realised that, if they could solve this problem, it could be massive. In 2023, they built a product specifically for Rescue Air, which helped Shrivastava and Chen land their first customers. The company builds AI voice agents for home service businesses, such as plumbers, electricians, HVAC technicians and roofers. According to Shrivastava, they make up what he calls the physical economy. Instead of calls going to voicemail or a hold queue, the AI agents pick up instantly. They are built to sound convincingly human, so you will not suspect a thing. What actually sets the product apart is the integration underneath it. The AI does not just take a message. It checks a company’s live calendar, books the appointment directly into the system, and follows up on old quotes that were never signed. That is the kind of follow-through most small contractors do not even have the staff to manage. According to Fortune, the company has raised more than $125 million over the last couple of years, valuing it at $1 billion. In 2025 alone, the HVAC industry was worth about $50 billion, with a projection of $75 billion by 2032. “This is a huge growth moment in the home services economy,” Shrivastava told the publication. “All these stories are coming out now that basically say, ‘with all that’s happening in AI, the next million-dollar job is the job of a plumber, the job of a technician… What Avoca has realised is that these people are the main characters. No AI wave is replacing the job of a technician, at least in the next five years.’” Interestingly, the whole company was built on the same instinct Shrivastava learned as a child in Michigan: answer the phone. Someone on the other end needs something.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Avoca's AI agents will become standard for home service businesses.

    Likely · Medium term

Open Questions

  • What is Avoca's long-term strategy for market expansion?
  • How will Avoca differentiate itself from emerging AI competitors?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Times of India.

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