Start from a QR scan
Each QR carries the city or specific station ID, so the intake already knows where the supplier is coming from. If something's missing, the agent asks.
Compass runs a network of fuel stations in Kazakhstan with a sprawling supplier ecosystem around it — stores, express markets, cafés, services. Onboarding new suppliers used to live in a chain of spreadsheets, WhatsApp messages and price lists scattered across personal chats. We replaced the chain with a WhatsApp agent. A supplier scans a QR code at any Compass site, lands in chat, and a structured intake walks them through everything Compass needs — company details, contacts, category, files. The output is a clean Bitrix24 card, not another forwarded message.
Compass talks to a large number of suppliers across many product and service categories, and every application arrived in its own shape: a phone call, a WhatsApp file, a forwarded message, an email. Nothing was structured, half the data was missing, and finding "all stationery suppliers in Almaty" was a manual job.
The team needed a single intake door that any supplier could find — and a CRM card on the other end with the fields actually filled in.
Every Compass site carries a QR code with a city or location identifier baked in. A supplier scans it, opens WhatsApp, and the agent already knows which region the application is coming from — no need to ask. Then a structured intake walks them through the rest.
The agent categorises the supplier on the fly, validates IIN/BIN, accepts price lists in PDF, Word, Excel or photo, and writes everything into a Bitrix24 card. The procurement team works from CRM, not from chat history.
Each QR carries the city or specific station ID, so the intake already knows where the supplier is coming from. If something's missing, the agent asks.
Company name, full name, IIN/BIN, contact person, phone, WhatsApp number, company address, country of manufacture — same shape every time.
Construction materials, FMCG, food, beverages, household goods, station maintenance, services — the agent picks the category and a sub-category from the conversation.
PDFs, Word, Excel, photos and price lists are stored and linked into the supplier card alongside the structured fields.
Each intake creates a supplier card in Bitrix24 with date, city, company, IIN/BIN, contacts, category, sub-category, file links and notes.
The agent is a Python backend talking to suppliers over the WhatsApp Business API via Whapi. Language is detected automatically — the intake runs in Russian or Kazakh — and the conversation state is driven from our side rather than from a no-code builder.
Validation, categorisation and file handling all happen before anything reaches Bitrix24, so the CRM card lands populated, not as a stub for someone to fill later. QR routing is done via per-station identifiers, which let the architecture scale without changing intake logic.
Every application lands as a structured Bitrix24 card with the same fields filled in. Procurement works from CRM, not from screenshots.
Company details, category, sub-category and files are already on the card by the time anyone in procurement reads it.
Adding a new site means adding a QR code — the rest of the intake is the same agent running on the same backend.
We reply within one business day. Then Azamat joins every first call personally, so you get an honest scope, budget, and fit from the person responsible for delivery.