The term chatbot doesn’t intrigue today as much as it did a decade ago.

A ‘chatbot’ is simply an automated tool, that makes businesses interact with their consumers, more easily and promptly. Chatbots have been around and not without having significantly and irrevocably disrupted the tech space.

It all began as far back as 1960 in the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, MIT. That’s where Joseph Weizenbaum created ‘ELIZA’, what was going to be the first-ever precedent for a chatbot. It could simulate computational understanding utilizing pattern-recognition algorithms but still lacked any “real intelligence” that would enable it to have meaningful communications or be truly helpful.

Fast forward to 2016 when Facebook announced a developer-friendly platform to build chatbots on Facebook messenger. The rest is history. The next stage of the conversational revolution had dawned.

Today, businesses worldwide, spanning industries like retail, delivery, consulting, banking, finance, booking, tourism, and job search, use chatbots to improve the speed and accuracy of their customer interaction. Chatbots are empowering, helping businesses, small and large, with increasing the efficiency, saving money, while also enabling a seamless customer experience, 24/7 and across platforms.

But there are different kinds of chatbots, each with their own set of benefits and limitations. And applications.

So does it really ‘click’?

While Click chatbots too can be extremely convenient and time-saving for millions of users, they lack critical understanding and flexibility. These chatbots can only automate very specific situations that they have learned, are likely to arise, such as looking up order status, refund status, or product or services catalog. They function on pre-programmed keywords or U/X features or suggested responses to take the conversation forward. That doesn’t leave much room for natural, human-like conversation.

Even variations of a specific question must have been pre-programmed for the chatbot to accurately understand a customer’s demand. For example, if a bot only understands, “Where’s my order?” while the customer happens to ask, “Is my package arriving today?”, the bot will fail to properly map the order status related query to its training database and will not be able to provide the desired customer support.

Click chatbots cannot learn and adapt on their own

Think of the times you have called customer support. Click bots are like the robotic voices telling you to press 1 or 5 or another number and then giving you another menu and then another one. These are the experiences that frustrate consumers. Don’t get me wrong, click bots can be great, if, for example, you want a bot that only does password reset and nothing else, or if you want to give your clients 3–4 options but for something more sophisticated we would strongly recommend to leverage an AI bot.

Limiting the interaction to just button clicks can have a negative effect on user experience.

Based on our research, users are highly unlikely to follow a linear path while engaging with a business. The lack of technology that allows free-form communication could plummet engagement and retention, especially in complex cases spanning banking, insurance, and telecom industries. An individual could say just about anything that might not necessarily be preempted by the Click bot.

AI Chatbots are superior to Click Chatbots because…

The beauty of AI chatbots is that they allow the user to communicate naturally in free form — to say what they desire without having to follow a slew of buttons.

It’s the evolution of human-bot interaction.

AI Chatbots are superior to Click Chatbots because they do not bombard the customer with any predefined set of keyword-powered buttons to capture them in an endless and useless conversation loop. They are capable of carrying out unique conversations, resolving a wide variety of customer issues, and eventually result in incremental revenue generation for the businesses.

Trending Chatbot Tutorials

Personalized engagement or standard support, what do you identify with?

Imagine if the user types —

“I got the dress delivered last weekend but now I think it doesn’t suit me well. The floral print is not exactly what I thought it would feel. Can you do something? I don’t want this and I want my money back.”

Would the bot be able to understand that the person is looking to return the item and receive a refund?

Definitely, if it’s AI-powered.

An AI chatbot thinks like a human, not like a robot

AI Chatbots are superior to Click Chatbots because they are capable of performing real-time sentiment analysis and conversational analytics while taking into account contextual factors, customer profiles, and business policies. They are equipped with the tools to take valuable action on the data, like redirecting the chat to an actual human in case of any sort of dissatisfaction expressed by the user and even sending push notifications for re-engagement.

Driving Disruption

AI Chatbots are superior to Click Chatbots because an AI is trained through a combination of supervised and unsupervised learning. AI can teach itself by looking at historic data and is capable of judgement. With customer service, the training includes learning from email, chat, messaging logs, and voice transcripts, to identify and group together similar queries and scenarios. This training involves deep reinforcement learning and has no end, hence, the interactions with an AI chatbot only improve with time.

An AI bot can talk, text, and chat and provides a seamless customer experience across channels. It doesn’t just converse but is also capable of making useful suggestions and recommendations based on its learnings.

Artificial Intelligence is incisively changing the world. Balancing themselves against the fast pace of technology and consumption today, there are businesses, and then there are businesses.

Which one are you?

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