If you've been researching AI tools for your business, you've heard both terms. Chatbot. AI agent. Sometimes they're used interchangeably, which creates genuine confusion about what you actually need. Let's separate them cleanly.
The simplest way to explain both
A chatbot waits. It sits on your website, embedded in a little bubble in the corner, and responds when a visitor types into it. It's reactive. Something has to happen first (a visitor arriving and choosing to type) before the chatbot does anything.
An AI agent acts. It watches for triggers — a form submission, a missed call, a job being marked complete — and does something as a result. Without waiting for anyone to initiate. It reaches out. It follows up. It asks for the review.
Where chatbots genuinely work well
Chatbots aren't bad tools — they're just misapplied tools. They work well when:
- You get high volumes of repetitive questions (business hours, pricing tiers, service area)
- Your customers naturally visit and linger on your website to research
- You're in a higher-consideration purchase where customers want to explore options before contacting you directly
SaaS companies, e-commerce stores, large service firms with complex offerings — chatbots make sense there. Visitors arrive, have questions, and the chatbot handles FAQs before routing to a human.
Where AI agents outperform chatbots
Agents win in situations where the customer isn't sitting on your website typing questions. Which is most of the time in home services:
- A homeowner fills out your form and then closes the tab. They're not coming back to chat — but they will respond to a text.
- A lead calls, gets voicemail, and hangs up. A chatbot can't help here. A Lead Bee texts them within 90 seconds.
- You send an estimate and the customer disappears. A chatbot on your website doesn't help — but an Estimate Bee follows up automatically on Day 3.
For home service trades specifically
Here's the honest truth: most home service businesses don't need a chatbot. Your customers don't browse your website for 10 minutes before contacting you — they search, they call or fill out a form, and they're gone. The engagement happens off your website, not on it.
What you need is something that meets customers where they already are: their phone's text messages. That's where AI agents live.
If someone is actively on your website and types a question → chatbot. If a lead just came in and you need to follow up → agent. If a quote went quiet and needs a nudge → agent. If a job is done and you want a review → agent. For trades, it's agents almost every time.