

“One missed call can be a lost customer. Zavo paid for itself within the first week.”
The reservations that quietly ring out while you cook — and how Zavo answers each one.
Your AI host takes the calls a small kitchen can't — answering while you cook, booking the sittings, talking through tonight's board, and routing the calls that genuinely need you.
Picks up in seconds when it's just you and a commis on the pass with no one free to reach the phone — so the diner ringing for a Friday table gets a warm voice and a booking instead of a line that rings out into an empty room.
Reads your diary and takes reservations across the early and late sittings, offering only the times a small room can genuinely turn — so a thirty-cover bistro fills every table without ever double-seating or overrunning the kitchen.
Trained on tonight's board, it tells callers the specials, the set-lunch price, the wines by the glass, and whether the tasting menu is on — so the questions a single chef can't stop to answer are handled in seconds, accurately.
Knows the diners who keep a neighbourhood bistro alive — greets a regular by name, remembers they like the window table or a particular wine, and notes it on the booking, so loyal guests feel looked after from the first ring.
Spots the call worth stepping off the line for — a private dinner enquiry, a supplier with a problem, a journalist after a table — and routes it to you with a note, so the bookings and questions that matter never wait in a voicemail box.
Texts a confirmation the moment a table is booked, sends a reminder the day before, and chases the no-shows that hurt most in a small room — so an empty table on a thirty-cover Friday gets re-let rather than left dark.
The reservation calls that used to ring out while you cooked are answered and booked, so a small room runs full across both sittings instead of leaving tables dark on a busy Friday.
You stay on the pass where you're needed, not darting to the phone between plates — the calls are handled for you, so the kitchen keeps its rhythm through service.
Loyal diners are greeted by name and their preferences remembered, so the relationships a neighbourhood bistro is built on feel personal from the very first ring.
Callers get the specials, set-lunch price, and wines by the glass without you stepping off the line, so a quick question never costs you a plate or a booking.
Your line is answered between services and long after you've locked up, exactly when diners plan a meal out, so a closed bistro never loses the booking.
Every diner is answered the moment they ring, with no voicemail and no queue, so nobody hangs up and reserves at the place on the next corner instead.
Confirmations and reminders cut the no-shows that hit hardest in a thirty-cover room, so the table you held is the table that turns up and spends.
Every call is captured with a transcript and the booking detail, so you can review any reservation, settle a query, and keep a clean record of your diary.
“We used to miss calls when we were out on jobs. Since switching to Zavo, every customer gets an answer straight away and we've picked up work we would've otherwise missed.”
“Most of our enquiries come by phone. If we're busy on-site, calls get missed. Zavo handles them for us and the extra jobs easily cover the monthly cost.”
“Patients often call outside normal hours. Zavo books appointments, answers common questions and makes sure we're not losing enquiries overnight.”
“January is always chaotic for us. Zavo helped us manage incoming calls without hiring another receptionist and clients have responded really well to it.”
“We were constantly missing calls while treating clients. Zavo now answers every enquiry, books consultations and gives us one less thing to worry about.”
“I was sceptical at first, but customers genuinely thought they were speaking to someone from the office. It's now answering calls we would've lost before.”
Based on a typical intimate chef-owned bistro losing a handful of reservation calls a week to a kitchen with no one free to answer. Your numbers move with how full your sittings run and how many regulars you keep.
A handful of reservation calls a week that used to ring out into an empty room, now answered and booked — the regulars who'd have tried elsewhere and the date nights that fill a small sitting. On a typical spend per head, that's around £2,600 a month back through the till, and a chef who stays on the pass through service instead of chasing the phone.
From the lunchtime set-menu enquiry to the last table of the evening, Zavo answers your bistro's phone the way you would if you weren't already on the pass — and never misses a booking.
A neighbourhood bistro lives on a full, intimate room and a base of regulars who come back — and almost all of it is booked over the phone. But a chef-owned kitchen rarely has anyone free to answer it: when it's you and a commis on the pass through a busy service, the phone simply rings out, so the couple after a Friday table books the bistro round the corner, and a regular wondering about the set lunch gives up. A small kitchen can't be on the line and on the plates at once, and many reservation calls come between services or after you've locked up. A bistro on Zavo answers all but the rarest call, usually before the second ring, and recovers a handful of reservation calls a week that would otherwise have rung out into an empty room — the covers that quietly fill someone else's.
The bookings you most want come in when you're least able to take them — in the lull between lunch and dinner when you're prepping, or late in the evening once you've finally closed the kitchen. A traditional answering service just scribbles a message. Zavo acts: it answers in your bistro's name, takes the reservation from start to finish, and leaves the details ready for you, so a closed door or a busy pass never loses you a table again.
Most bistros have no host stand and no one whose job is the phone — the owner is cooking. As a virtual receptionist that needs no front desk, Zavo handles the calls a small team can't stop for, taking each reservation properly and capturing exactly what a careful host would:
The reservation lands in your diary clean and complete, the kitchen keeps its rhythm, and nobody has to choose between the plates and the phone.
A bistro's menu changes with the market and the season, and callers ask — what's on the specials board, how much is the set lunch, what's by the glass, is the tasting menu on tonight. Trained on the board you set each day, Zavo answers these in seconds and only from what you've told it, so it never promises a dish that's already sold out. The quick questions that would pull a single chef off the line are handled accurately, and the diner gets what they need to commit to a booking rather than ringing round to ask.
A neighbourhood bistro runs on loyalty, and regulars notice how they're treated from the first hello. Zavo recognises a returning diner, greets them by name, and remembers the details that matter — that they like the window table, drink a particular wine, or always come for the Sunday set menu — noting it on the booking so service feels personal before they've sat down. The relationships you've built over years are carried into every call, even the ones that come in while you're plating, so your regulars feel as looked after on the phone as they do at the table.
Zavo plugs into the systems independent bistros actually run — ResDiary, OpenTable, SevenRooms, and Tock — so it always books from live availability rather than guessing, and writes every reservation back to the right place. If you keep a reservations book by the till or run something of your own, that's no problem: it can still capture every booking in a clean, structured format and deliver it however suits you. As one of our hospitality solutions, it sits naturally alongside the rest of your room's tools — see the broader AI host for hospitality if you run a wine bar or deli arm too.
Nothing is installed and no phone system changes hands. You route your current number to Zavo, link your diary, and tell it about your sittings, your menu, and how reservations and regulars should be looked after. It answers in your bistro's voice from the very first call — warm, considered, unhurried — and you can replay any call and refine it over time. For most chef-owners the slowest part is just deciding on paper how each caller should be handled, a rare moment to step off the pass and think about the room.
A phone-answering service takes a note and leaves the rest to you. Zavo does the job — books the sitting, explains the specials, and greets your regular by name.
Books appointments, updates your CRM, sends emails, creates tickets, and works across the tools your business already uses.















Pick a voice, language, and welcome message. Grab a Zavo number or forward your existing line. Live in a few clicks.
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The host repeats only the specials, prices, and dietary information you've set for the day — so it never promises a dish that's sold out or a table you can't seat, and every call is logged for the record.
For a private dinner or a chef's table it sends a secure deposit link rather than reading card numbers aloud, so a special booking is locked in without your kitchen touching sensitive payment details.
Books, reschedules, and confirms — and answers any question customers ask.
Calls customers after service to check in, capture feedback, and flag anything that needs follow-up.
Screens calls, takes messages, and routes the important ones to the right person.
Yes. Zavo connects to the diary independent bistros actually keep — ResDiary, OpenTable, SevenRooms, or Tock — and books from your live availability, so it only ever offers a table you genuinely have free across the right sitting. Every reservation, change, and cancellation writes back in real time, so the diary you glance at between plates always matches the room and you never double-seat a small dining room. If you keep a reservations book by the till or run something of your own, that's fine too: Zavo captures each booking in a clean, structured form and sends it straight to your phone or a shared sheet. Tell us how you take bookings now and we'll set it up around the way your bistro already works.
Yes — that's its core job. When a diner rings, Zavo takes the date, time, and party size, checks your diary, and seats them into the early or late sitting that suits the kitchen, confirming on the spot. It respects the turn times a small room needs, so it won't seat a two-hour table when you need to flip it for a second sitting, and it holds your handful of larger tables for the bookings that need them. The reservation lands instantly and the diner gets a confirmation by text. Because it answers while you're plating, the calls that used to ring out into an empty room now become covers — so a thirty-seat bistro fills both services without you ever stepping off the pass.
Yes. A bistro menu shifts with the season and the market, and callers want to know what's on — the specials board, the set-lunch price, the wines by the glass, whether the tasting menu is running tonight. Trained on the board you set each day, Zavo answers these in seconds and only from what you've told it, so it never promises a dish that's already sold out or a price you've changed. Anything that needs your judgement is passed to you with the caller's details. The quick questions that would otherwise pull a single chef off the line are handled accurately, and the diner gets what they need to commit to a booking rather than ringing round to check first.
Yes, and for a neighbourhood bistro that's part of the magic. Zavo recognises a returning diner from their number, greets them by name, and can remember the details that matter — that they favour the window table, drink a particular wine, or always come for the Sunday set menu — noting it against the booking so the welcome feels personal before they arrive. It carries the relationships you've built over years into every call, even the ones that land while you're on the pass. Regulars feel as looked after on the phone as they do at the table, which is exactly the loyalty a small room depends on. You stay in control of what it remembers and can adjust a guest's notes whenever you like.
Yes. For a private dinner, a small celebration, or a chef's table, Zavo captures the full brief — the date, numbers, the occasion, any dietary needs, and what the party hopes for — and routes it to you with notes so you can shape the evening properly. It can explain your minimum spend and what's included, and where a deposit holds the booking it sends a secure payment link rather than taking card numbers over the phone. Because these enquiries are worth stepping off the line for, it can put a genuinely important one through to you while you decide how to handle the rest. The special bookings that make a bistro's reputation are captured the moment the caller rings, not lost to a missed call.
Yes — you decide what's worth stepping off the pass for. Zavo handles the everyday reservations and questions itself, but picks out the calls that genuinely need you — a private-dining enquiry, a supplier with a problem, a press request, or a regular asking for you by name — and routes them to you with a quick note on what was said. Everything else is booked or logged, so you're not darting to the phone for a question about opening hours mid-service. You set the rules: which calls reach you immediately, which wait for a callback, and how. So the one call that matters gets to you in seconds, while the steady flow of bookings keeps filling your diary without interrupting the kitchen.
No — it only ever says what you've configured for the day. Zavo works from the board, prices, and availability you set, so it won't offer a special that's sold out, quote a set-menu price you've changed, or seat a table you don't have. If a caller asks something outside what it knows, it takes their details and passes the question to you rather than guessing. Every call is logged with a transcript, so you have a clean record of exactly what was said about a dish or a booking. You can listen back and tighten its answers whenever you like, updating the specials as the kitchen changes. The agent relays tonight's truth faithfully, never its own invention — which is what protects a small room's reputation.
Yes. Security is built in, not bolted on. Calls are encrypted on the way in and held safe at rest, with access locked down and logged, and the host only shares what you've set it to share. Diner names, numbers, and reservation details are handled to enterprise standards, never sold on and never used to train anyone else's models. Where a deposit is taken for a private dinner, payment goes through a secure link rather than card details being read aloud, so nothing sensitive passes over the call. Every conversation is logged in full, which helps you settle any query and meet your data-protection duties. If you've specific requirements around how long reservation data is kept, we'll walk you through Zavo's retention approach before you switch it on.
Always — and that's where a lot of a bistro's bookings hide. The calls you most want often come in the quiet between lunch and dinner when you're prepping, or late at night once the kitchen's shut and a diner is finally planning the week. Zavo answers around the clock, so those reservations are taken rather than lost to a phone nobody can reach, and out-of-hours callers get a warm, useful answer instead of a dead line. There's no out-of-hours cover to pay for and no rota to juggle around a two-person kitchen. Every caller gets the same considered welcome at eleven at night as they would at the height of service, so a closed door never costs you a table.
Yes. If you've grown from one bistro to a small group, Zavo can answer for each site with its own menu, diary, sittings, and regulars, while giving you a single view across the lot. A caller reaches a host that knows that room's tables and tonight's board, not a generic call centre that can't tell one site from another. Opening hours, escalation contacts, and call handling can all differ from one bistro to the next. Reporting rolls up so you can compare call volumes, booked covers, and no-show rates site by site, and spot where the phone is quietly costing trade. Whether you run a single dining room or a couple of sister sites, every caller is answered consistently and their reservation lands with the right kitchen.
It helps in two ways that add up quickly in a small room. First, you stop losing calls: the reservation calls that used to ring out while you cooked or after you closed are answered and booked, so more of the demand you already have actually lands. Second, confirmations and reminders cut the no-shows that hurt most when every table counts, so the covers you hold are the covers that turn up. Most bistros see fuller sittings and fewer empty tables within the first few weeks, simply because nothing is being dropped. We'd sooner you judged it on your own till: Zavo logs every call, booking, and no-show, so you can weigh the extra covers it protects against what you pay.
Yes, and in a thirty-seat room it makes a real difference. The moment a table is booked, Zavo sends a confirmation by text so the diner has the details and your diary is current. It sends a reminder the day before, which is one of the simplest ways to cut the no-shows that leave a small bistro half empty. If a table cancels late or doesn't show, it can flag it so you offer the space to someone on a waitlist rather than lose the cover. It can also follow up after a special meal to invite the diner back. All of this happens automatically, without you sending a thing, so your covers hold firm and your evenings don't unravel over a couple of empty tables.
Most bistros go live the same day and are fully settled within a few days. There's no kit to buy and nothing to install in the kitchen. You divert your existing number to Zavo, connect your reservation diary, and tell it the essentials — your sittings, your menu and specials, your regulars, and how you like different callers handled. From its first call it speaks in your bistro's name and tone, and you can replay any conversation and fine-tune its answers as you go. Connecting your diary on the technical side is something we take care of. Most chef-owners find the biggest task is simply writing down how they want the phone handled — a rare and useful chance to step back from the pass.
That's completely fine — plenty of good bistros still do. Zavo connects to the main reservation systems out of the box, but it doesn't need one to be useful. If you keep a book by the till, it can still take every reservation in full, note it in a tidy, structured form, and get it to you whichever way works — a text, an email, or a shared sheet you check before service — so nothing is lost and you stay in control of the actual diary. When you're ready to move to a digital system, Zavo connects straight to it. You won't be left out because you run your bookings the traditional way, and you're never forced to change how your room works to use it.
Yes — that's the whole point. Zavo answers in your bistro's name and a tone you set, so it sounds warm, considered, and unhurried rather than like a call centre or a brusque booking line. It isn't reading a generic script; it speaks about your room, your menu, and your regulars the way you would. You can listen back to any call and refine exactly how it greets people, describes a dish, or handles a request, until it feels like an extension of your front of house. Because it recognises returning diners and remembers their preferences, it can be more personal than a stranger answering the phone in a rush mid-service. The character that makes your bistro yours is carried into every call.