so as I built my CharlesGPT and have got decent results, I’ve thought in my classical PMF mad scientist way: why not offer it as a service?
So I did, and came with the Apollo Campaigns {{First_Name}}GPT, {{Last_Name}}GPT and {{Company}}GPT, and got a bunch of responses.
I’m basically using botpress, uploading a bunch of data in it + a few esthetical touch ups and voilà. Beta Cost: 850usd + 100usd/m maintenance. If clients ask for something more complex / more featured, then we’d talk about 1.5k - 3k setup costs.
Use cases include:
CoachGPT / ConsultingGPT: offering a bot to your clients as part of your monthly packages or at 97$/month to answer their basic questions anytime
LeaderGPT: responds to all your employees basic questions. Amazing for onboarding. OnboardingGPT = making sure your new employees get up to speed asap without repeating yourself like a bot (CEO’s nightmare)
CustomerGPT: basic bot to cover all your customer’s FAQ
SalesGPT: answers basic sales questions / provides links to payment
The premise is that any product nowadays will be ChatBot base. 1 human prompt with a great bot answer. “Scrape me a UFC Athlete’s Email List and Start an Apollo campaign inviting them to my podcast.” “Add these 5 podcast interviews of mine on the website.” It basically replaced the entire VA experience. It’s just a matter of time before a more capitalistic business comes up with these features. It’s the wild west, lawmakers are slow.
This means: humans expect EverythingGPT. Your employees, your partners, your clients. Everything GPTized. So you might just offer them this + get used to this new era.
My first experience with chatbots were with ManyChat 6 years ago. Bots weren’t intelligent back then, mostly lead gen tool. That all changed with GPT-3. Welcome to the fumble. Are you gonna pick the ball up or risk not getting tackled?