Integration

AI phone agent integration for Google Calendar

Turn phone appointment requests into calendar-ready booking records.

Browse templates

Triggers

  • Booking request captured
  • Reschedule request captured
  • Waitlist slot opened

Actions

  • Create event draft
  • Add attendee details
  • Send owner notification

Field mapping

Call outputGoogle Calendar field
Caller nameEvent title
Preferred timeEvent start
ReasonDescription
Phone numberAttendee note

Setup steps

  • Create an appointment workflow
  • Capture timezone and preferred times
  • Connect calendar requests
  • Review before confirming

Example workflows

Troubleshooting

Implementation plan

Choose one workflow first

Start with a single caller intent from the example workflows. Map only the fields the team will actually use in Google Calendar, then add optional transcript or summary fields after the owner confirms the structured outcome is useful.

Protect downstream data

Use required-field checks, duplicate protection, and a review step for sensitive calls. The goal is not to push every transcript into Google Calendar; it is to create clean records that staff can trust.

Test realistic caller paths

Run a normal call, a caller who changes their answer, and a caller who triggers human handoff. Confirm the destination record shows completion status, owner summary, mapped fields, and any missing information.

Expand only after review

Once the first workflow is stable, add another related workflow or integration action. Keep each phone workflow separately named so reporting, routing, and rollback remain simple.

Launch review

Caller promise

Make the first screen and opening line match what the caller will actually get. For Google Calendar AI phone integration, the promise should be narrow enough that a caller understands the purpose before sharing details or scanning a QR code. Avoid broad claims like "we can help with anything"; a specific promise produces cleaner calls and clearer follow-up.

Required outcome

Decide which fields are required before the call can be considered complete. A practical first version should capture caller name, preferred time, reason, then send a summary that Google Calendar owner can act on without replaying the call. If a field is not used for routing, qualification, scheduling, or review, remove it from the first launch.

Human review

Write down the cases that should not be automated. Use human review for sensitive calls, incomplete required fields, duplicate records so the workflow stays useful without pretending to handle every edge case. Review the first real calls before connecting higher-risk actions or expanding the workflow.

FAQ

What should CallURL send to Google Calendar?

Send a compact structured outcome rather than an unfiltered transcript. The most useful payload includes mapped fields such as caller name, preferred time, reason, phone number, call status, summary, handoff reason, and a stable workflow identifier.

Should every call create a Google Calendar record automatically?

No. Routine completed calls can create or update records automatically, but sensitive, incomplete, or high-risk calls should wait for review. The integration should make the next action easy without creating bad data or irreversible changes.

How do I test the integration?

Run a routine call, a call with missing required fields, and a handoff call. Confirm that required fields land in the right Google Calendar destination, duplicate calls do not create duplicate work, and staff can understand the owner summary.

What is the safest first workflow?

Start with one of the related workflows already listed for Google Calendar: Appointment booking, Appointment rescheduling, Waitlist management. Launch one clean mapping before expanding to broader phone automation.

Connect Google Calendar

Start with a workflow-specific schema, then map each captured field into Google Calendar.