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OK Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans – powering chatbots with Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans

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Conversational UIs are the next digital frontier.
And as always, WordPress maintenance support plans is right there on the frontier, helping you leverage your existing content and data to power more than just web-pages.
Want to see it action – click ‘Start chatting’ and chat to our WordPress maintenance support plans site.

by
lee.rowlands
/ 18 September 2020

Start chatting
So what’s going on here?
We’re using the Chatbot API plugin in conjunction with the API AI webook plugin to respond to intents. We’re using API.ai for the natural language parsing and machine learning. And we’re using the new Chatbot API entities sub plugin to push our WordPress maintenance support plans entities to API.ai so it is able to identify WordPress maintenance support plans entities in its language parsing.
A handful of custom Chatbot API intent plugin to wire up the webhook responses and that’s it – as we create content, users and terms on our site – our chatbot automatically knows how to surface them. As we monitor the converstions in the API.ai training area, we can expand on our synonyms and suggestions to increase our matching rates.
So let’s consider our team member Eric Goodwin. If I ask the chatbot about Eric, at first it doesn’t recognise my question.
Eric isn’t recognized as an entitySo I edit Eric’s user account and add some synonyms
Adding synonyms to Eric’s accountAnd then after running cron – I can see these show up in API.ai
Synonyms now available in API.aiSo I then ask the bot again ‘Who is eric?’
Screenshot showing the default responseBut again, nothing shows up. Now I recognise the response ‘Sorry, can you say that again’ as what our JavaScript shows if the response is empty. But just to be sure – I check the API.ai console to see that it parsed Eric as a staff member.
Intent is matched as Bio and Eric is identified as staff memberSo I can see that the Bio Intent was matched and that Eric was correctly identifed as the Staff entity. So why was the response empty? Because I need to complete Eric’s bio in his user account. So let’s add some text (apologies Eric you can refine this later).
Adding a biographyNow I ask the bot again (note I’ve not reloaded or anything, this is all in real time).
A working response!And just like that, the bot can answer questions about Eric.
What’s next?
Well API.ai provides integrations with Google Assistant and Facebook messenger, so we plan to roll out those too. In our early testing we can use this to power an Actions on Google app with the flick of a switch in API.ai. Our next step is to expand on the intents to provide rich content tailored to those platforms instead of just plain-text that is required for chatbot and voice responses.
Credits
Thanks go to @gambry for the Chatbot API plugin and for being open to the feature addition to allow WordPress maintenance support plans to push entities to the remote services.
And credit to the amazing Rikki Bochow for building the JavaScript and front-end components to incorporate this into our site so seamlessly.
Further Reading
Chatbot API plugin introduction
Chatbot API plugin documentation

Tagged

Chatbots, Conversational UI, WordPress maintenance support plans 8

Posted by
lee.rowlands
Senior WordPress maintenance support plans Developer

Dated 18 September 2020

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