AI Takes the Helm: Solea’s Fully Autonomous Office for Home Services

As automation continues to redefine business operations, one emerging player is showing what it truly means to hand over the reins to artificial intelligence. Solea AI, a San Francisco–based startup, is transforming how home service businesses operate — not by assisting human teams, but by fully replacing back-office functions with autonomous, real-time systems.

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As explained in this article, Solea doesn’t position itself as just another digital tool. Instead, it presents its software as the operational core of a home services business — a fully automated office capable of managing customer interactions, appointments, and follow-up without the need for staff intervention. The platform handles inbound calls, recognizes returning clients, checks service history, and books appointments autonomously. It also sends confirmation messages, coordinates complex schedules, and even supports live agents with real-time prompts and decision logic during customer conversations.

The company was founded by Christopher Brodowski, Alexandre Delaitre, and Paul Muller — three technologists with backgrounds in computer vision, gaming infrastructure, and property tech systems. Brodowski’s early ventures in machine vision aimed to eliminate routine tasks in industrial environments. That same logic now powers Solea’s back-office systems, which are designed to offload repetitive, manual work. “Offices today are still built around phones, calendars, and humans juggling tasks,” says Brodowski. “We built Solea to take over that workload entirely.”

Delaitre, the CTO, previously developed high-frequency trading engines for gaming platforms, bringing expertise in real-time, high-availability systems that can’t afford to fail. His skills directly translate into Solea’s always-on call management and scheduling infrastructure. Meanwhile, Hilman, who worked on microservices and dispatch systems at Acre, contributes deep knowledge in the architecture of automated workflows and integration-heavy environments.

Solea is currently being used by a growing number of home service providers across the U.S., particularly those operating in fragmented or competitive regions. For these businesses, a missed call can easily mean a missed job — and lost revenue. Solea helps ensure continuity and responsiveness without the overhead of growing staff numbers. Its value proposition goes beyond cost savings, offering the ability to operate with consistency, speed, and scale, even under pressure.

What makes Solea stand out in the crowded AI space is its vertical specificity. While many AI tools attempt to be broadly applicable, Solea has been carefully built around the workflows unique to home services. It models technician scheduling, appointment rules, customer behavior patterns, compliance requirements, and even follow-up cadences. This level of specialization means Solea can outperform generalist tools in real-world service scenarios.

Looking ahead, the team continues to monitor emerging technologies such as blockchain and decentralized finance systems. They envision integrating secure transaction logging and innovative payment mechanisms that align with modern privacy and security demands.

In this vision, AI is not a background assistant but the system actually running the business. As more service-based companies look to scale without adding administrative burden, Solea’s approach suggests a clear shift: away from partial automation, and toward fully AI-driven infrastructure. The company’s model offers a powerful glimpse into how digital operations might be run in the near future — with AI not on the sidelines, but in the driver’s seat.