Most chatbots are glorified FAQ pages that annoy visitors. Real conversational marketing is about meeting buyers in real-time, on their terms. Here's the difference.

You added a chatbot to your site. It pops up asking "How can I help you today?" The visitor types a question. The bot doesn't understand. It suggests three irrelevant help articles. The visitor closes the chat and leaves.
Congratulations, you've added friction in the name of reducing friction.
Most chatbots are decision trees pretending to be conversations. They handle the easy stuff nobody needed help with and fail at everything else.
It's not about the bot. It's about the principle: buyers want immediate, relevant responses in the moment they're ready to engage.
Form fills and "someone will get back to you in 24-48 hours" don't cut it anymore. When someone's evaluating, they want answers now. Give them a way to get those answers.
That might be chat. It might be SMS. It might be a callback in 60 seconds. The channel matters less than the responsiveness.
Bots are good at exactly two things:
Routing. "Are you looking for sales, support, or something else?" Qualify and hand off to the right human or resource. Simple decision tree. Don't pretend it's AI.
Scheduling. "Want to book time with our team?" Show the calendar, let them pick a slot, done. No human needed for the logistics.
That's it. Everything else - actual questions, objection handling, complex qualification - needs a human or much better AI than most companies have deployed.
Best-performing chat implementations:
Bot handles the opener. Greeting, basic routing, capture contact info. Quick and automated.
Human takes high-intent. Visitor on pricing page? Route to live rep immediately. Someone browsing blog posts? Bot can handle or collect info for follow-up.
Clear handoffs. When the bot can't help, it says so and connects to a human. No endless loops of "I didn't understand that, please try again."
The hybrid model requires actual humans available to chat. That's the part companies skip, then wonder why their "conversational" strategy isn't converting.
98% open rates. Responses in minutes, not hours. Works when people aren't at their desk.
For high-intent moments - demo follow-up, quote requests, event reminders - SMS outperforms email by a mile. Yet most B2B companies won't touch it because "it feels spammy."
Spammy is unwanted messages. Timely, relevant SMS to people who asked to hear from you isn't spam - it's meeting them where they are.
Forget "conversations started" or "bot deflection rate." Those are vanity metrics.
Measure:
If your bot is deflecting conversations but killing conversion, it's not working.
Conversational marketing isn't about technology. It's about availability.
When someone's ready to buy, they want to talk now. Companies that figure out how to be there - through whatever channel - win the deal. Companies that make people fill out forms and wait lose to whoever responds first.
The chatbot is a tool. Responsiveness is the strategy.
11 years of "can you make these things talk to each other?" - turned into a career.
Behind-the-scenes looks at what we're building, integration tips that actually work, and automation strategies from 40+ implementations.