The Chatbot Agency Quality Gap
There are excellent chatbot agencies and terrible ones, and they both look similar on the surface. A polished website and a confident demo can hide an agency that builds brittle bots that break when users go off-script. Here's what to look for.
Signs of a Good Chatbot Agency
They ask about failure cases, not just success cases. Good chatbot developers obsess over what happens when the chatbot doesn't understand a user. They'll ask about your edge cases, your escalation requirements, and your tone in difficult conversations. If the agency only talks about happy-path flows, they're not thinking about production.
They have industry-specific experience. A chatbot for a law firm has different requirements than one for an e-commerce store (different compliance constraints, different conversation patterns, different user expectations). Industry experience isn't just nice to have — it prevents expensive learning-on-your-dime mistakes.
They can show you a live demo in your industry. Not a generic demo they built for prospects — a real deployment they can let you interact with.
Red Flags
- No mention of fallback handling or human escalation
- Can't explain how they handle training data or conversation design
- Quote is suspiciously low (under $2,000 for a real enterprise chatbot)
- No maintenance/support offering post-launch
- Their demo breaks when you go off-script
Finding Chatbot Agencies
Browse verified chatbot development agencies on AgencyRadar, filtered by industry and location. Read the reviews — they'll tell you what working with them is actually like.