
Subscribe & Follow
Jobs
- Content Curator Johannesburg
- Campaign Manager Cape Town
- Account Executive Cape Town
- Junior Copywriter and Proofreader Cape Town
- AM Field Sales Executive Cape Town
- Webmaster and Sales Support Pretoria
- Digital Marketing Internship - Paid Position Centurion
- Account Administrator Centurion
- Receptionist Cape Town
- Client Services and Admin Johannesburg
Chatbots: Help or hindrance?

‘Conversation commerce.’ It’s the latest buzzword in content innovation, and with good reason. Facebook Messenger supports 300,000 chatbots and customers exchange eight billion messages per day*. We can order a product, schedule an appointment and get advice all via a conversational chatbot. But how familiar are South African consumers with this emerging tech, and are they using chatbots to help them with online purchases?
Chatbots today
Still largely confined to the realms of customer service, these talking machines – from AI-powered versions to rudimentary decision-tree messaging apps – have alleviated pressure on call-centre staff and provided quick turnaround on basic customer queries. But ask a complex question, and chatbots run out of answers. And the conversations are just plain clumsy, if not frustrating.
Customers are increasingly familiar with emerging tech and demanding new ways of shopping. According to research done by PayPal and Ipos in 2018, 70% of South African online browsers purchased online in 2018. But we are yet to scratch the surface of the potential of technology to deliver highly personalised, on-demand content into the palms of customers, the moment they need it most.
Chatbots of the future
Imagine wondering what to cook, and a chatbot delivers a recipe, a wine pairing and a shopping list, then reminds you when it’s time to put on the oven – now that’s a bot that delivers value. It’s also personalised, meaningful and doesn’t interrupt the user experience.
The dream chatbot has a clear purpose, delivers quick, efficient communication, and balances conversation with functionality. To create this super bot, strategists require content that has sufficient depth for personalisation and well-crafted personality for brand authenticity. Layered, deep, bespoke content underpins an effective chatbot.
So, how to get there?
- Balance conversation with functionality.
- Choose an objective with clear purpose. Go narrow and deep or shallow and wide with your subject matter – it is impossible to be both.
- Have a personality, but don’t try to be a person. Your customers know they are talking to a robot. They want simple, fast, efficient service. But, depending on the brand, they may also want the interaction to add value or offer empathy.
- Start with a simple conversation tree and add branches to the core platform as the business grows.
- Know your audience. Build rules with sensitivity to what your audience is looking for and how they intuitively navigate content.
- For efficiency, have a solid metadata and taxonomy strategy. Structure and categorise your content strategically in a way that can be used for the chatbot, but also other platforms, including voice search tech and apps.
*Source: Facebook, May 2018
- Struggling with data, budgets, and effectiveness? Discover Merkury11 Mar 08:19
- The AI revolution in search: How to stay visible in a changing digital landscape10 Mar 12:25
- Dentsu Creative South Africa enhances leadership in content with new appointments07 Mar 11:04
- Dentsu School of Influence announces 2025 cohort06 Mar 12:08
- Marcel Swain joins dentsu X to redefine brand engagement in South Africa03 Mar 10:32
Related
Dentsu School of Influence announces 2025 cohort 6 Mar 2025 Dentsu Influence launches to transform influencer marketing with AI and data-driven approach 17 Dec 2024 Who wants to be an influencer? Why influencing is rapidly becoming a mainstream career in SA 29 Oct 2024 Phumelele Buthelezi joins Delta Victor Bravo as project manager 16 Oct 2024 South African online shoppers favour fashion and food in digital cart 15 Jul 2024 IAB SA’s content marketing committee relaunches as branded entertainment and content committee 3 Jul 2024
