Turn website chats into captured leads
Not every visitor is ready to buy the second they land — most aren't. The question that decides whether they're worth anything to you is simple: when they drift off without buying, do you keep a way to reach them, or are they just gone?
The visitor who goes quiet
Picture a normal chat. Someone asks a question, gets an answer… and then nothing. They've gone quiet — maybe thinking, maybe distracted, maybe already drifting toward the exit. In a plain setup, that's the end of it: they leave, and you never knew who they were.
It doesn't have to end there. Because you set the rules, an assistant can notice the silence and, after a few seconds, gently nudge — ask if there's anything else it can help with, or offer to take their details so someone can follow up personally. That small nudge is often the whole difference between a lost visitor and a captured lead.
The question it can't answer — turned into a lead
There's a second moment that usually leaks: when a customer asks something the assistant genuinely can't answer. Handled badly, that's a dead end. Handled well, it's an opening — the assistant says it'll make sure they get a proper answer, takes a name and email, and passes it to you to follow up. Instead of a shrug and a lost visitor, you get a warm contact and a reason to reach out.
Why this matters more than it sounds
Think about who you're actually keeping: people who were interested enough to start a conversation. That's a far warmer lead than a cold address scraped from somewhere. Every one you capture is someone you can follow up with, answer properly, and often win — a sale that would otherwise have walked out in silence. Over a month, those quietly add up into a pipeline you simply didn't have before.
See it answer your own questions
The assistant on this site answers exactly like this — only from real store data, and it tells you when it doesn't know.
Get a tailored quote →Common questions
Isn't asking for an email pushy?
Not the way it's done here — it's offered naturally, usually right when the assistant can help further or follow up on something specific. You set the tone.
What happens to the leads it captures?
They come straight to you — name, email, and what the person was asking about — so you or your team can follow up personally.