Chatbot Alternative: Governed AI for Your Business
A smarter way to handle customer enquiries without the guesswork
What's the difference between a chatbot and governed AI?
You've probably dealt with chatbots before — the ones that either can't understand a simple question or, worse, make something up. That's the problem with most AI chatbots: they're trained on everything, so they'll answer anything, even when they shouldn't. Governed AI flips that. You decide what it can talk about, and it sticks to that. If a customer asks something outside those boundaries, it'll say it doesn't know — rather than inventing an answer. That's rather the point.
Why you might want an alternative
If you run a small service business — say, a plumber, electrician, or solicitor — you don't need a chatbot that can discuss the weather or recommend a film. You need one that can handle the same five or six questions you get every day: 'What are your hours?', 'How much do you charge?', 'Can you come on Tuesday?'. A governed AI does that, and nothing else. It won't wander off into territory you haven't approved. That's not just tidy — it's safer, especially if you're in a regulated industry where a wrong answer could cause real trouble.
How it keeps you in control
You set the rules. You define which topics are fair game, and you write the responses yourself — or approve them from a shortlist. The AI doesn't learn from customer conversations or update itself overnight. It only says what you've told it to say. If a customer asks something it doesn't recognise, it flags the query for you to review later. You're not handing over the keys — you're just giving it a very clear map.
What it means for your customers
From their side, it feels like a normal conversation. They type a question, they get a sensible answer, and they move on. No waiting for you to reply to an email, no navigating a phone tree. But because the AI is governed, they never get a response that's wrong, misleading, or out of date. That builds trust — and it saves you from having to clean up after a chatbot that's gone rogue.
Is it difficult to set up?
Not really. You start by listing the questions you get most often, then write the answers you'd give. The AI learns those patterns and handles them from there. You can tweak things as you go — add new topics, remove old ones, update prices or opening hours. It's designed to be managed by someone who runs a business, not a developer. If you can send an email, you can set this up.
The bottom line
Governed AI isn't a flashy chatbot that tries to be clever. It's a practical tool that does one thing well: answer your customers' questions accurately, consistently, and only on your terms. If that sounds like a sensible alternative to the usual chatbot nonsense, you're not wrong.