[Chatbot fail #3] Lack of personality
When it comes to any type of interaction, humans want to feel like they’re engaged in a dialogue with someone — or something — that can relate to them. While the idea of adding a “personality” to a chatbot may sound strange, it does help customers engage with the bot and the site. Just because users know that they’re chatting with a machine, doesn’t mean that they should feel like they are.
Thankfully, the process of giving your chatbot a personality isn’t anything super rocket science-y. You could give the chatbot its own name, some dialogue mannerisms and even some baked-in comments that can be sent to the user depending on the time of day, season and product they’re asking about. All these minute details help make your chatbot more relatable.
An example to follow: LEGO’s personable chatbot customer experience
LEGO is one brand that has done well to inject personality into its bot. Their bot greets you with a robot emoji and GIF, and continues to make LEGO-related quips throughout the conversational experience.