Practical AI for Wichita Falls businesses, without the hype.
Most owners already know AI is worth using. The hard part is knowing where it actually helps your business, which tools are worth the trouble, and how to set them up without it becoming another project that never finishes.
River & Stone helps Wichita Falls and Texoma businesses put AI to work in plain, practical ways — starting with an honest look at where it will help you and where it will not.
Need a change later? Routine updates happen the same or next business day — not weeks.
Start with what actually helps, not what's trendy.
AI can answer routine customer questions, speed up content and email, keep reviews moving, and take repetitive work off your plate. It cannot run your business, and it is not worth bolting on just to say you have it.
We begin with a straightforward audit: where AI fits your specific business, in priority order, with realistic effort and cost. You decide what is worth doing from there.
Where AI can help a local business
- A plain-language AI audit and roadmap
- A website assistant that answers common questions and captures leads
- Review responses and a steady review-request workflow
- Content and email drafting workflows your team can run
- Intake and scheduling automation
- Staff training to use AI tools well
- Ongoing tuning and support
Honest about what AI will and will not do.
We set up practical, supervised tools built on reliable platforms. We do not build custom AI models, we do not put sensitive customer data anywhere it should not be, and we do not promise AI will replace your staff or guarantee results.
The goal is simple: a few well-chosen tools that save you time and help your customers, set up properly and explained in plain English.
How an AI project works
- 01
Audit
We look at your business and how you work, then map where AI genuinely helps — and where it does not.
- 02
Prioritize
You get a short, ranked roadmap with realistic effort and cost, so you choose what is worth doing.
- 03
Set up
We configure the chosen tools with your real information and connect them to how you already work.
- 04
Train
We show you and your team how to use what we built, in plain terms.
- 05
Support
We tune and adjust over time as you see what works, with help when you need it.
Set up for how a Texoma business actually runs.
A local clinic, shop, or service business does not need an enterprise AI program. It needs a couple of practical tools that answer customers faster and save a few hours a week, set up by someone who will explain them and pick up the phone.
We work with businesses across Wichita Falls, Burkburnett, Iowa Park, and southern Oklahoma communities like Lawton, and we keep AI projects scoped to what a small team can actually use.
Related resource
Use this if you are still deciding what deserves attention first.
Bring the questions into a Strategy Hour.
If the right starting point is not obvious, bring the questions into a Strategy Hour. We will look at the current website, Google profile, service pages, and concerns before recommending the next useful move.
Schedule a practical first lookFrequently asked questions
Most projects fall between about $300 and $2,000, depending on scope. A plain-language audit is the low-cost starting point; setting up a website assistant or a content workflow costs more. We scope it up front so the number is never a surprise.
No. We set the tools up with your information and train you and your staff in plain terms. If you can use your phone and email, you can use what we build.
We use reliable platforms and we do not put sensitive customer information anywhere it should not be. We will tell you plainly what data a tool uses and keep it appropriate to your business.
Common wins are answering routine customer questions on your site, drafting content and emails faster, keeping reviews moving, and automating intake or scheduling. The audit tells you which of these fit your specific business.
No, and we would not pitch it that way. The goal is to take repetitive work off your team's plate so they can spend time on the work that needs a person.
Start with a Strategy Hour.
Bring the current website, Google profile, questions, goals, and concerns. We will look at what is already working, where clarity or trust may be breaking down, and which next move would be most useful.

