I run SiteGPT and recently set up a system where multiple AI agents with specialized roles (copywriter, SEO, researcher, etc.) work together on marketing tasks. One lead agent coordinates everything. Wrote up how it works and what we've done so far.
Yes, technically it will index everything if it's just a single page. Some people have already started abusing it like that. I need to put in place some restrictions for that.
Assume you have multiple products. You can't give the content of both these websites to a single chatbot, right? For example, if someone asks chatbot about "What's the pricing", should it give the pricing of first product or second product?
In cases like this, it makes sense to create multiple chatbots (one chatbot for each website) and keep the content separate.
Ah, OK. That makes sense as far as the chatbot count. That's quite unclear to me from the site, and the chatbot isn't any more helpful.
> What is the difference between pricing plans in terms of chatbots? What does that mean, exactly?
> SiteGPT offers different pricing plans based on the number of chatbots and web pages/documents that can be created. The Essential plan allows for the creation of one chatbot and up to 25 web pages/documents, while the Growth plan allows for the creation of two chatbots and up to 100 web pages/documents. The Pro plan is the most popular and allows for the creation of five chatbots and up to 500 web pages/documents. The Elite plan is the best value and allows for the creation of unlimited chatbots and up to 5000 web pages/documents. The pricing plans are designed to accommodate websites of all sizes and needs.
Congratulations, it "read the Powerpoint slide again." I had some college professors who did that. Ask for clarification, they'd read the slide again, as if I'd not understood the slide the first time.
Yeah, chatbot can only be as good as the content that is in the website. If the chatbot didn't answer it properly, that's because I did not have content on the website to answer this question.
Yes, it's a multi step process. The first step is to figure out which chunks of text is relevant to the question. Then we can generate answer based on that.
Many people think that simple projects have no market because they are simple, but Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and so on are all simple projects. People do not want to build their own [insert literally anything]. People that value their time will pay for services such as this, and I wish you luck.
Any business/website owner who deals with customer support will like it (assuming it works well).
My guess is the people on here poo pooing this idea are programmers who don't deal with customer support. Don't let their negative response deter you. Let them be fools.
I’m not poo-pooing it. It’s great to see someone take initiative. I’m just saying if you’re wondering how to use GPT to do this, this is how. Build it yourself in a couple hours or buy the service, I don’t care.
Just sharing the details for those that are curious in how to make their own chatbot on their data.
Yes, I understand. I will give you the same option as the previous person. Please give me a sample webpage, just one web page and I will create a chatbot for that webpage, and post the chatbot link here.
I understand. In that case, the only way is to subscribe to the $19/month plan and try it out for yourself. You can cancel anytime you like with the click of a button.
I got this request from so many users already. So I will be adding a button inside the chatbot which says "Talk with Human", that will trigger Crisp/Intercom or whatever live chat the website owner has configured.