The mobile community eagerly awaits the F8 event next week to see
whether rumours come true about Facebook launching a Messenger Bot Store
and potentially roll out a Chat SDK which would allow developers to
build their own bots for Messenger. However, mobile messaging platform
KIK beat Facebook’s Messenger to it when it rolled out its Bot Shop
allowing developers to build bots on Tuesday. Though hosting only 16
bots at the moment, with the likes of The Weather Channel, H&M or
Vine, it is in line with the messaging industry’s consensually bullish
approach to the future of bots within their business models.
The Chat Bot Opportunity
The MIDiA Messaging Platforms Report
had the cumulative monthly active users of mobile messaging platforms
at 4.8 billion in October 2015. The global messaging penetration and
usage are constantly increasing. This is a cumulative number of users,
who often use a combination of these services for different purposes.
The more services double down on their bot strategies, the more doors
open for brands to directly communicate with and help consumers –
regardless of which platform they decide to chat on. The vision of
one-to-one attention from brands to masses wherever they are is of
course an attractive one and there shall be no shortage of interest from
brands deploying bots. But for consumers to adopt bot usage, the
execution will be key. With Facebook possibly releasing the Chat Bot SDK
to all developers in the near future, there is a risk of many brands
rushing to jump on the chat bot bandwagon at the expense of their bots’
quality. Facebook will have to be careful with the curation of bots to
avoid an overflow of sub-par bots- but the brands will have to do their
part too in designing those experiences.
Chatbots Are Still At A Very Early Stage
Though chat bots do ‘work’, their functionality (for example on
KIK) is mostly limited to a guided ‘automated helpline-like’ experience
on the smartphone screen:
The point is, however big the opportunity clearly is, it will take time before chat bots alone feel real enough not to get giggled at when they are used.
Facebook
for example is aware of this. With M, it’s keeping its human co-support
alive to ensure the best possible all-around messaging companion
experience for end users. Until bots become a lot more advanced, the combination of approved Bots
and M will hope to pull together the best of the two worlds for
Facebook. While standalone bots will be great for straight forward
requests, such as content delivery or playing games, more complex requests and conversations could be handled by
M.
Brands must be careful to judge how much interaction their product
or service realistically requires. In some cases human supervision might
be well worth having in combination with bots to ensure the perfect
experience in the messaging realm. During the coming hype it will be
important to remember that the ultimate goal for brands is to tap into
the massive messaging user base, not to build the smartest bot. Thus,
the most successful bot-betting brands won’t necessarily be the ones
with the most advanced bots, but those who can deliver the best consumer
experience to messaging users-be it at the cost of employing a number
of humans to supervise. If brands overestimate what bots can do alone,
in a bid to save money, they are running a risk of customers simply
laughing at them and never using the bot again after their first
‘grotesque’ experience.
The opportunity to reach hundreds millions of users at the right
time and place with a helpful proposition is indisputably not one to
miss. Chat bots and messaging platforms are now opening the door to this
opportunity. There is mainstream potential to chat bots, but if too
many negative/humorous user experiences prevail in the early hype days,
and consumers assign such reputation to chat bots, this could
significantly slow the adoption and potentially leave chat bots in their
current niche stage for years to come.
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