About
Voice AI shouldn’t require four vendors and a telecom degree
Every team that ships a voice agent today tells the same story. They picked an agent platform. Then they signed up for a telephony provider. Then a speech-recognition vendor, a voice vendor, and a model provider. Five dashboards, five invoices, and a latency budget being spent on network hops between all of them.
We built Rayvoc to collapse that stack. The agent orchestration layer and the telecom layer are the same system: buy a phone number in the dashboard, point an agent at it, and take your first call in minutes. When you outgrow the defaults — your own LLM, your own voices, your own carrier — every layer opens up without a migration.
What we believe
- Latency is the product. A brilliant agent that pauses for two seconds is a bad agent. We engineer for the pause first.
- Lock-in is a tax. Models change leadership every quarter. Carriers are contracts. You should be able to swap any layer of your stack on a Tuesday.
- Pricing should survive contact with the invoice. One all-in rate. No transfer-time fees, no SIP surcharges, no surprise stacking.
- Self-serve means self-serve. A 14-day trial with a real phone number — not a demo call with a sales team.
Where we are
Rayvoc is in private preview with design partners, launching publicly soon. The waitlist gets first access, launch pricing, and a direct line to the founding team — the people who will actually read your feature requests.
Be first in line when we launch
Every account starts with a 14-day free trial — 1 concurrent channel, a real phone number, and full platform access.