Fully-autonomous booking sounds impressive and is a terrible idea for the biggest day of your life. Here's the human-in-the-loop design that makes AI coordination trustworthy.
We get asked the obvious question: if the AI is so good at calling vendors, why not let it book them directly and skip the human entirely? Because the cost of a confident mistake at a wedding is enormous, and trust is the entire product.
What the agent does
The AI agent handles the high-volume, low-judgment work end to end: it places calls and WhatsApp messages, introduces itself clearly as Celabe acting on your behalf, asks the qualifying questions, captures availability and pricing, and proposes site-visit slots. It does this across dozens of vendors at once and writes down every word.
What the human does
Before anything reaches you — and certainly before any money moves — a human planner reviews the agent's work. They check that quotes are comparable and market-reasonable, that a vendor's reviews and portfolio hold up, and that nothing in the conversation raised a flag the agent might have missed.
“The agent makes the calls. The planner makes the calls that matter. You make the decision.”
Why this structure beats both extremes
- Versus pure DIY: you skip the sixty calls and the follow-up tax, without giving up control.
- Versus a pure human planner: you get the same human judgment at a fraction of the cost, because the agent absorbs the repetitive labor that made planners expensive.
- Versus fully-autonomous AI: no booking, no advance, and no commitment happens without a human review and your explicit approval.
AI is the leverage. The human planner is the trust. Keeping both is the whole point.
Plan your wedding without the 60 phone calls
Celabe's AI agent calls your vendors and a human planner signs off on every booking. Pilot pricing for the first 100 weddings.
See how it works