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Your bot is now your brand

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We’re in the midst of a once-in-a-decade paradigm shift. Messaging is the new platform, and bots are the new apps. The shift radically changes end-user experiences and developer frameworks and inevitably will change business models, how we monetize, and how we advertise.

While these are still early days, a few interesting trends are becoming apparent. Here are some recommendations for brands entering the brave bot world.

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Pull, don’t push

Messaging is much more of a private space than web sites or apps ever were. There is less room for intrusive advertising in messaging than in any other media. Messaging platforms are also very sensitive about spam. Messages or bots that lead to user annoyance will get auto-filtered out. On some messaging platforms, bots will not be allowed to initiate conversations – only users will. Therefore, brands must create a pull effect so that users initiate engagement.

Talk, don’t get fancy

Another big change is that the conversational interface is text heavy. While messages in the future will support rich interactive formats, currently they are mostly text. So brands will have to discover, and execute on, ways to engage users in a meaningful conversation rather than just serve up banners or video spots.

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Prepare for frequent, intense contact

Messaging apps are a terrific medium for engagement. They are instant and users tend to be more responsive with messaging than with other media. Also, users tend to use messaging apps dozens of times each day. The brands that enact a smart plan will see much higher frequency and intensity of engagement than with other apps.

Make it personal

Each message is sent to one unique individual; each customer interaction can be customized to that person. Now brands will acquire the ability to tailor the service to each customer. This will require you to capture context, build user profiles and maintain history. The user should be able to order pizza — or just about anything else — by saying “usual” soon after the user has some history with the brand.

With this in mind, what are some of the use cases that brand bots can enable?

Product search. Brand bots can help users find the right product from the brand’s portfolio. For instance, cosmetics company Sephora recently launched a bot that helps users find the right beauty product from its extensive list of SKUs. Your bot, like Sephora’s, needs to be able to query user requirements and suggest the best matching product for that user — plus provide the option to get detailed product information.

This bot is like the neighborhood bookseller — a friendly advisor, on whose advice customers rely to buy the perfect book. For brands, this can be a great opportunity to upsell and cross-sell products (within reason).

Customer support. Brand bots ought to have an ability to handle complaints and issues from existing customers. A bot that sells but does not support will disappoint customers quickly. A bot that says “Sorry, not my department” will make a poor impression. Bots enable brands to reduce or eliminate phone hold time for customers.

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Personalized responses. Brand bots should provide personalized responses in all interactions, whether it be product recommendations, support, or offers. They must maintain user context and history as well as build inferences. While customer support agents, websites, and apps could get away with being somewhat impersonal, bots today need to be intensely personal. The reason is that bot conversations happen in the context of a messaging app where every other conversation (with family, friends etc.) is just that — personal. Users will be unforgiving of impersonal bots.

Focus on content, not advertising

The adage that advertising is content by other means is even more relevant in the bot world. Brand bots should share content relevant to the brand category and interesting to the user. Become a bigger part of the user’s life, and you build a stronger brand relationship.

Get discovered

Bot stores are emerging to help users discover new offerings. These are both platform-specific as well as cross-platform bot stores. Brand bots should be listed in both formats. Additionally, a new advertising model will inevitably emerge where popular bots will, for a fee, refer a user to other bots.

The bot is the brand

Very soon, your bot will become the primary interface for your brand. Users will visit your bot more than they will visit your website, app, or offline store. This will be true before, during, and after the sale. Your users will interact with your bot more than they will notice your ads. In fact, the way to interact with your product may itself be through the bot (e.g., message or talk to the bot to switch on the music or play a specific song). In this cool new era, the bot becomes the product; the bot becomes the brand.

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To summarize, bots are a major disruption that will create new opportunities and threats for brands. The opportunity is massive due to the immense reach of messaging platforms, the ease-of-use of messaging, frequency of use, and intensity of user engagement. The risks are great, too. Brands slow to jump on to the new medium will get disrupted. The risk of doing nothing is far greater than the risk of doing something. Now.

Beerud Sheth is founder and CEO of cloud messaging platform Gupshup. Previously, he founded freelance platform Elance.

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