Chatbots deflect tickets. Swiftex books revenue.
Every company has tried a chatbot for sales. Most eventually admit it doesn't work — the intent model was trained on support transcripts, there's no CRM write-back, it can't carry voice, and the KPI was deflection, not revenue. Swiftex is a different category: agentic sales execution, trained on 40M real Indian sales dialogues, optimised for booked pipeline.
Same chat window. Completely different job.
Generic chatbots
Built for support deflection.
Intercom Fin, Drift, Yellow.ai, Haptik, Gupshup bot builders — powerful tools in their home category. They shine at reducing support ticket volume.
- KPI
- Containment rate (tickets resolved without a human)
- Training data
- Support transcripts, FAQ knowledge bases
- Architecture
- RAG over docs · scripted flows · intent classifiers
- Channels
- Web widget · app chat · sometimes WhatsApp
- Handoff
- Route to support agent
- CRM
- Log a ticket
Swiftex · Revenue agents
Built for sales execution.
Purpose-built for booking meetings, qualifying intent, handling objections, carrying multilingual voice, and moving deals.
- KPI
- Booked meetings · qualified pipeline · cost-per-meeting
- Training data
- 40M Indian sales dialogues (voice + chat)
- Architecture
- Agentic loop · tool-use · atomic booking · coaching
- Channels
- Voice + WhatsApp + email · native, not bolt-on
- Handoff
- Route to rep with full context + reason codes
- CRM
- Write opportunity · sync intent score · fire NBA
Three architectural reasons — not fixable with prompting.
Intent models trained on the wrong data.
Support chatbots are trained on “where's my order” transcripts. Sales conversations have totally different signals — budget hints, timeline markers, competitor mentions, objection types. A support intent model will classify a high-intent buyer's “let me think about it” as resolved, when it's actually a stall signal that needs a specific counter.
No atomic write-back to revenue systems.
Bots log a conversation. They don't hold a calendar slot atomically during the chat, write a qualified opportunity to CRM, fire a credit-check API, or assign the deal to a territory. Sales execution needs all of the above, in the same agentic loop, with rollback on failure.
Voice is a bolt-on, not native.
In India, 60% of high-intent follow-ups happen on a phone call, not chat. Real-time voice needs sub-200ms end-to-end latency, streaming LLMs, barge-in handling, and direct SIP integration. Generic platforms bolt on third-party voice engines, which makes the conversation feel robotic and delayed — buyers hang up.
Real WhatsApp message → two radically different outcomes.
Prospect: “Hi, Alto price chaiye, Bangalore mein. Exchange bhi hai, Wagon R 2015.”
What to expect from each.
| Capability | Swiftex | Generic chatbots (Intercom Fin / Drift / Yellow.ai / Haptik / Gupshup bots) |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose-built for sales | Yes — category | No — built for support deflection |
| Trained on sales dialogues | 40M Indian · voice + chat | Support transcripts, FAQ corpora |
| Voice agents (native) | 10 languages · 200ms latency | Third-party bolt-on · 2–4s latency |
| WhatsApp CTWA ingestion | Native first-class | Available, configure-heavy |
| Intent scoring per conversation turn | Transformer · reason codes | Intent classifier for routing |
| Atomic calendar booking | Rollback on failure | Link to 3rd-party scheduler |
| Code-switched Hinglish / Tanglish | Native | Partial, limited |
| Post-call coaching for reps | Every call | N/A |
| CRM opportunity write-back | Real-time | Ticket-style log |
| Primary KPI | Booked meetings · pipeline | Containment rate |
| Time to live for sales use case | 14 days | 6–16 weeks of flow building |
Sales agents vs chatbots, answered.
What is the difference between a chatbot and an AI sales agent? +
A chatbot runs scripted flows or retrieves FAQ answers; its success metric is ticket deflection. An AI sales agent runs live, two-way sales conversations — qualifying intent, handling objections, booking meetings, updating CRM — and its success metric is booked revenue. Adjacent categories, different architectures.
Why don't generic chatbots work for sales? +
Three reasons. (1) Intent models are trained on support transcripts, not sales dialogues, so they miss buying signals. (2) They have no CRM write-back, calendar-atomic booking or commission logic. (3) They can't carry voice, only chat — and 60% of high-intent follow-ups in India happen on a phone call.
How is Swiftex different from Intercom Fin, Drift, Yellow.ai, Haptik or Gupshup? +
Intercom Fin and Drift are strong support deflectors. Yellow.ai, Haptik and Gupshup are enterprise conversational-AI platforms with broad use cases but configure-heavy sales flows. Swiftex is purpose-built for revenue execution: pre-trained on 40M Indian sales dialogues, 10-language voice, atomic WhatsApp-based booking.
Can a chatbot do voice calls? +
Most generic chatbots cannot. Voice requires sub-200ms latency speech-to-text, a streaming LLM, a real-time TTS engine, SIP integration and barge-in handling. Swiftex owns this full stack; generic chatbots rely on third-party voice bolt-ons that introduce 2–4 seconds of latency.
How does Swiftex measure success vs a chatbot? +
Chatbots optimise for containment rate. Swiftex optimises for booked meetings, qualified pipeline, cost-per-booked-meeting and revenue influenced. Different objective function = different architecture.
If a bot ever sold anything, it would have by now.
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