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adler.studio

AI for the automotive industry

LISA
This post was written by hand. This is not AI-generated slop.
This is worth your time if you are interested in our process and how we built this particular product.
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In mid 2025 we were approached by Vladislav Smolyanoy (now CEO of The Vienna AI Company) who back then had already demoed an early version of his vision of LISA, a voice agent for car dealerships, to stakeholders in the field. He introduced us to the idea of a comprehensive suite of AI tools for car dealerships and told us about who's already on board and where this project could potentially be going. Having seen our work on 0cred, Vlad wanted to work with us to turn his vision into a reality. We happily accepted the offer and got to work.

Today, The Vienna AI Company is the fastest-growing startup in the AI automotive industry in Europe, and we helped the team raise two rounds along that journey.

Breaking down a product with huge scope

LISA was never a one-feature project. From day one it was a full suite of AI tools for car dealerships: chat, transcription, phone agents, workflow automation, integrations and more. The scope moved fast, so we had to break everything down into small, shippable blocks.

We worked very closely in a small core team, shipped weekly, tested weekly, and kept adjusting in real time. We also took this on at a relatively low rate and paired it with an equity deal because we believed in the upside and wanted to build for the long term.

We went through many rounds of design, messaging, dashboards, but also core product functionality. Some versions were too flashy, some too technical, and some just not right for dealership owners, so we kept refining until the story, interface UX and AI functionality finally clicked together.

Car Dealerships x AI

The client really wanted an Apple Intelligence-style direction and came to us with a pre-designed logo and some other branding directions. We were admittedly not the biggest fan of those from the start (we didn't think it would work with the mostly male car dealership audience and thought it looked pretty tacky) but as requested we gave it a shot. So we explored colorful pinkish gradients with glassy layers.

LISA branding overview

initial branding direction (before we took over)

LISA old logo

old LISA logo (before we took over)

LISA new logo

new LISA logo (after we took over)

LISA MVP: Liquid Glass and Apple Intelligence Look and Feel

After we assessed the client's needs and preferences, we started with super rough wireframes and implemented the first glassy version of both the dashboard and the landing page to test that direction in a real product context.

LISA wireframe

early wireframe of LISA dashboard

first landing feedback

first landing page feedback

In the first few weeks of a project we like to work closely with our clients and be in constant communication either in Figma async or on a call, to get a feel for the product and the direction they want to go in. This can result in lots of comments (as visible in the image on top).

Live-Recording: Building the landing page (part 1)

Live-Recording: Building the landing page (part 2)

dashboard redesign process

LISA dashboard v1

LISA dashboard v1

Sidequest: Branding for The Vienna AI Company

In parallel, we also had to design the parent-company brand for The Vienna AI Company. For that logo, we explored many different Vienna landmarks (e.g. Stephansdom, Hofburg, ...) but eventually ended up picking the Vienna State Opera as the core reference and translated it into a mark that fits the rest of the ecosystem.

The Vienna AI Company logo timelapse

The Vienna AI Company logo

The Vienna AI Company logo

First rebrand: pink glass is out, flat blue is in

After testing the first direction and talking to customers, we shifted to a style that felt more familiar in the Austrian car dealership space and easier to trust for a traditional audience.

LISA Figma overview

Figma overview

At this point, our Figma file had grown into a behemoth of a file with lots of different screens and components. (It still looks like that btw, it REALLY needs a cleanup but we sadly haven't gotten to it, too many things going on that are all more important than a figma cleanup).

Landing v2

landing v2

The new direction looked tame and boring, but this was on purpose. Our clients wanted something that looked and felt familiar. It has a clear CTA, carousels, and simple to understand illustrations with almost no visual overload.

implementing the new landing page in code

Building and shipping with a tiny team and budget

For most of the project, the core team was just Philipp (our founder), Semere (one of our devs), and Vladislav (founder of The Vienna AI Company). Philipp and Semere were both coding and coordinating execution, while Vladislav was focused on sales and feeding his own, the investors' and our first customers' feature requests to us. We mapped features, jumped contexts constantly, pushed back on scope creep and kept shipping under pressure. We also did this at lower rates with a vested equity deal.

If that kind of setup is interesting to you, feel free to reach out to us, we occassionally take on projects like this, if we see the vision.

Build in public screenshot

Semere and Phil working on the product on call

From the get-go we already had real customers, so we built with constant customer feedback directly in mind and on the ticket list. That made this project harder than the usual startup scenario of building for a future customer base, because alongside shipping new features we also had to handle bug reports, fixes, and rapid change requests in real time.

Final Pre-Launch Rebrand: the last version was too boring after all

The third and final direction was blue again but cleaner. Vladislav (our client) came up with the idea to integrate LISA as an avatar into the product because the target audience clearly wanted to "see AI". We combined that with the blue wheel logo, introduced orbs, and removed most of the glass to land on a cleaner dashboard direction for LISA.

This redesign was meant to be more attractive to investors and younger people, having learnt that dealerships usually convert through other channels anyway. It also felt more modern and clean, which is what the target audience wanted.

LISA avatar

LISA avatar

The avatar became a central branding anchor for us. It gave the product a recognizable face, made the AI angle immediately obvious, and helped us keep the visuals modern without making the interface harder to use for the core dealership audience.

LISA re-redesign hero

Draft landing final

final "wireframe" introducing the orb hero animation to Vlad on call

Our new hero animation showcases some core tasks that LISA can automate. This is great to showcase most of LISA's core features at a glance. Building these types of animated heroes that tell a story is an adler.studio staple, we've done it for many other projects and could also do it for you.

LISA re-redesign hero vertical

LISA re-redesign testimonial

LISA re-redesign rest

Modern landing

modern meets trustworthy and "human": the site's newsletter section

Dashboard touch-up

Up to this point, most visible updates were on the landing page. The core product, including the AI web dashboard, call system, and other core flows, was still running on the older pink glass UI. That gap had to be closed, so the next phase was bringing the actual product experience in line with the new brand direction.

dashboard re-redesign

LISA chat flow

new version of chat, clean and in blue

Branding was only one part of the job. The product side was heavy too: many connected modules, lots of edge cases, and different user journeys that all had to work together. And the main problem: the product to this day still isn't set in stone, it's constantly evolving and built iteratively. Our team helped with planning and scoping out features as well as actually building them.

A good example of this complexity is the automation builder. At a glance it looks similar to n8n-style workflows, but it is fully proprietary and much more on-rails for dealership-specific operations. No n8n was used.

the LISA workflow builder

Tech Stack

TanStack Start is a cutting-edge full-stack framework for building web applications with React, based on Tanstack Query and Tanstack Router
TanStack Start helps us build snappy UI without sacrificing on UX, DX or performance
TRPC is a type-safe RPC framework that allows you to skip writing API routes and integrates frontend and backend seamlessly
TRPC is a no-brainer for us, it's type-safe, easy to use and integrates seamlessly with the frontend
Astro is a web framework focused on fast content-rich websites with minimal client-side JavaScript
Initially we wanted to go with TanStack Start SSR for the landing page, but i18n support was lacking at the time so we went with Astro for the public pages
Tailwind is a CSS framework based on utility classes, this allows coherent CSS naming across all projects and team members
Tailwind is our go-to for styling, it's fast, flexible and easy to use
Expo is a framework for building native mobile applications using React Native
We used Expo to build the mobile app, it's a great way to get a native app up and running quickly

Disclaimer: for this project we can only share a limited part of the stack publicly. We can not go into much detail about the AI tech involved.

Demo Day

The initial phase of LISA had a super hard deadline: the product had to be live-demoed in November in front of important industry stakeholders, roughly five months after project kickoff. For AI products that is always a little scary, because live demos can break in unexpected ways, due to the undeterministic nature of AI. Pre demo day we tightened UX, cleaned up visual hierarchy, prepared the core flows, and nailed the demo. Since then, it has only been going up.

LISA live demo deadline context

LISA launch and live demo at Obereder/Castrol Business Day 2025

Post Demo Day till now

After Demo Day and into the new year, we stayed close and kept shipping with the team. This became an ongoing product partnership, with Philipp Parzer moving away from the development role and more into supporting as fractional CTO / Head of Product across roadmap, delivery, and putting the product decisions coming from C-Suite, investors and customers on a timeline.

Since then, another round has been raised off the back of strong execution from both our development team and the founding team.

Teamfoto at Rollout

from left to right: Wolfgang Hummel (car dealership owner), Max Hummel (car dealership owner), Philipp Parzer (co-founder of adler.studio), Vladislav Smolyanoy (founder of The Vienna AI Company) at the LISA rollout for Autohaus Hummel

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