Get All Access for $5/mo

Why Chatbots Are Failing Your Customers Without the proper approach to this new technology, companies will only end up wasting money and frustrating their audiences.

By Elizabeth Closmore Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

Chatbots are set to transform marketing, but there is a bump in the road that many are missing.

According to Digitas, 59 percent of Americans have communicated with chatbots or would be willing to do so. After all, customers can use them to receive quick and personalized assistance right on their mobile devices.

Brands, on the other hand, can use chatbots to automate customer service, be available 24/7 and collect data about their consumers. In fact, chatbots could help reduce business costs by more than $8 billion per year by 2022. That's why major companies such as NBC, Sephora, and Uber have already built their own bots.

Related: Top 10 Practices for Making a Great Chatbot

Messaging apps like Facebook Messenger, WeChat and WhatsApp also contribute to the rise of chatbots. According to eMarketer, more than a quarter of the world will use mobile messaging apps by 2019. And brands continue to launch their own chatbots on these apps.

Despite this excitement, however, chatbots are still failing your customers. Without the proper approach to this new technology, companies will only end up wasting money and frustrating their audiences. That's why it's important for marketers to understand the complexities of chatbots, and be prepared for the challenges that they pose.

Here's what you need to know.

Why chatbots are failing

Chatbots aren't being used to their full potential. Marketers are forcing them to perform traditional functions and, as a result, cutting themselves short. For example, they plug simple, automated responses into their messaging services instead of taking the opportunity to reimagine the entire customer experience around this new tool.

As Katie Lamkin wrote for Prophet, "Many companies think they are innovating, when they are simply iterating . . . . Rather than re-imagining the moment and overall experience, initial solutions for chatbots mimic modern-day call centers."

Related: Choosing the Right Chatbot Program Could Be Your Best Customer Service Move

You wouldn't use a fork to do the job of knife, right? Then don't use a chatbot to perform the functions of a call center. Think about it: If you apply an old strategy to a new platform, you still have an old strategy.

The takeaway here is that chatbots are more than just squawk boxes that parlay messages between parties. They're powerful tools that can deliver personalized experiences to individual consumers. They can be used to follow up with each buyer along their journey, provide optimized services and complete transactions -- but only if marketers use them correctly.

How you can optimize your chatbot strategy

Two major issues prevent marketers from making the most of chatbots: siloed departments and ineffective technology.

Let's start with the first one. Chatbot interactions don't exist in a vacuum. A customer might see your email newsletter, for example, then check out your Facebook page, and then open up Facebook Messenger to ask a question to your chatbot. In order to deliver the best experience possible, you need to be able to see every step of that journey. That's why your departments -- from social media and customer service to sales and IT -- need to work together to develop a unified view of the customer.

The solution is to adopt the right technology for the job. Specifically, marketers need to connect their bots to a system of intelligence that contains data from every customer touchpoint. They need one platform where they can view and collect information from email responses, social channels, customer relationship management software and sales calls.

Related: 10 Metrics Your Chatbot Should Track to Optimize User Experience

For example, when a customer messages a company on Facebook Messenger, this data can be processed and matched with their data in the platform. Machine learning can then be applied to that data. This helps marketers understand exactly what the customer wants, and then route their message to the appropriate customer care agent. Or if a customer starts a conversation on Twitter and then picks it back up on Facebook Messenger, companies should be able to follow this conversation and use aggregated customer intelligence at the point of engagement.

By integrating departments and acquiring the right technology, companies can enable a seamless handoff between bots and customer service representatives --leaving that traditional call center strategy behind.

Building more intuitive customer experiences

Chatbots aren't going anywhere. They offer new and efficient ways for marketers to reach individual customers at scale. And with the growth of messaging apps, they fit right into customers' mobile habits.

Still, hype alone won't help them succeed. To harness the full potential of these tools, marketers must take the right approach. They have to connect their chatbots to an intelligence platform that combines data from every touchpoint. This way, the chatbot can fall right into line with other outreach channels, and customers can enjoy the most intuitive and personalized experiences possible.

Elizabeth Closmore

Global Head of Product Evangelism at Sprinklr

Elizabeth Closmore is the global head of product evangelism and partnerships at Sprinklr, leading the company’s product strategy and partnerships with social channels. Prior to joining Sprinklr, Closmore led social business strategy at Target and worked in digital marketing at Hearst.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

Is One Company to Blame for Soaring Rental Prices in the U.S.?

The FBI recently raided a major corporate landlord while investigating a rent price-fixing scheme. Here's what we know.

Side Hustle

This Former Starbucks Employee Started a Side Hustle That's Making More Than $70,000 a Month — and He's Not Done Yet

When Tom Saar moved to New York City, he spotted a lucrative business opportunity.

Business News

Microsoft Reportedly Lays Off Over 1,500 Employees in Cloud Sector as Partnership with OpenAI Strengthens

Alphabet also reportedly laid off employees from several teams in Google's cloud unit last week.

Green Entrepreneur®

Why You Need a Contribution Mindset to Thrive in 2024 and Beyond

How to set yourself and your business up for long-term success.

Side Hustle

10 Online Side Hustles Proven to Boost Your Bank Account

Even the busiest schedules can accommodate finding a precious few hours to create a profitable online venture — something that many are already mastering.