Why Chatbots Are Unsuitable for Client-Side Applications
Feb 14, 2025
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Following the much anticipated commercial release of ChatGPT in November 2022, the rapid pace of AI development made a significant impact on the capabilities of chatbot applications. We all remember, and with little fondness too, the early chatbots that came out. At best they were capable of one-line formulaic responses to the most elementary of questions and were about as suited to interacting with customers as a disgruntled tomcat on the prowl in the early hours!
Generative AI made for a significant improvement, enabling chatbots to have genuine conversational ability for the first time. As the use of natural language processing (NLP) technology made chatbots significantly more useful, and early industry pioneers such as Chatbase made transitioning to a GenAI chatbot relatively inexpensive, their popularity surged.
Now, as we find ourselves a couple of years on from ChatGPT’s arrival, chatbots are rapidly becoming the de facto standard for automated lead generation and customer service. However there’s plenty to suggest that this may not be the preferable outcome from the client perspective. While today’s chatbots have improved out of sight relative to the early solutions, the experience they provide to visitors, prospects and established customers alike still leaves much to be desired. Recent survey data from Forbes reflects this. Their 2023 research discovered that 80% of customers who interacted with a chatbot experienced additional frustration and 72% overall felt that the use of Chatbots for customer service was not worthwhile.
Why chatbot offerings make for dissatisfied customers from the outset
Chatbots provide an impersonal and unfulfilling experience client-side, and here’s the main reason why – even with generative AI they still remain unintuitive.
The learning curve packs a punch
Although they have improved markedly from the earliest implementations, chatbots still come with a learning curve attached. The response from a chatbot and its relevancy to an individual clients’ circumstances remains subject to the quality of the input prompt, no matter how well it is trained, and it’s highly likely the majority of your customers are not expert prompt engineers and nor do they wish to spend hours getting up to speed with prompting methodologies!
Time-to-value is the critical consideration here. In today’s fast-paced digital world, clients are eager to receive top-notch insights from you sooner rather than later so why require them to learn the ins and outs of prompting to obtain answers from bots that actually speak to their particular challenges in an impactful way?
Why transitioning away from chatbots allows for optimized time-to-value
The obvious question then becomes – if chatbots are ill-suited to delivery of value to your clients, which approach is preferable? The answer, replacing your chatbots with an interactive form. Forms have been around for so long they predate chatbots by years; however a modern conversational form with conditional logic is capable of providing a personalised experience from the very first interaction, without the need for any prior understanding of prompting techniques on the lead or client’s behalf.
With innovative no-code solutions such as Productised, user form input is supplied to an AI model which receives instruction and context from your training data, chosen prompt sequences and brand voice; before individualised guidance is presented to prospects or clients which is deliverable in a range of formats, such as blueprints, assessments or guides. This hyperpersonalized customer experience arises when productisation meets personalisation and it provides a level of nuance that chatbots can seldom if ever match.
To illustrate the contrast between the two approaches, imagine you are a creator in the business development space. You have offered a custom branded chatbot to your clients in order to promote improved retention and enhance value provision. However, overall engagement levels have been disappointing. Your clients and prospects appear to regard the chatbot as a transactional tool with limited usefulness in spite of your best efforts to illustrate the value it provides. The bot is most definitely capable of providing valuable business advice, however this only follows extensive prompting, and clients are often wrong-footed by misleading responses caused by AI model hallucinations.
By replacing the chatbot with a solution that produces digital products capable of rendering high-quality dynamic output and using an interactive form as the first port of call, your leads or recently acquired clients can receive a tailored growth strategy based on answers to form questions relating to their business model, challenges and goals. This makes for a compelling exchange of value; without the need for any prompting expertise or a significant time commitment on the client’s behalf.