How Lead Capture Works
The chatbot is configured to ask for contact information at a specific point in the conversation. For most businesses, this happens when the visitor has asked a question that the chatbot cannot fully answer, or when the visitor’s question indicates purchase intent. The chatbot says something like: “I want to make sure Scott can follow up with you directly. What is the best email address for you?”
The visitor types their name and email. The chatbot confirms it, continues the conversation, and logs the contact information. HubSpot’s marketing research shows that conversational lead capture significantly outperforms static contact forms for conversion rates. Your team receives a notification with the lead details and the full conversation transcript, so they know exactly what the visitor was asking about before they reach out.
The key is that this happens naturally inside the conversation. It does not feel like filling out a contact form. Visitors who would click away from a popup form often provide their contact information when a chatbot asks during a helpful conversation.
What Information Gets Collected
Every chatbot I configure collects at minimum: name and email address. Phone number is optional and depends on your business type. Service businesses that need to call leads benefit from phone collection. E-commerce businesses usually skip it.
- Name: First name only, or full name depending on your preference.
- Email address: Validated format before the chatbot accepts it. No typos getting through.
- Phone number: Optional. Configured if your follow-up process involves phone calls.
- The question they asked: The full conversation transcript goes with every lead notification. You know exactly what they wanted before you follow up.
Contact forms capture maybe 2 to 3 percent of visitors. For a side-by-side look at how chatbots compare to live chat for customer engagement, see the AI chatbot vs. live chat comparison. Chatbot lead capture in my deployments typically runs 8 to 15 percent of conversations. The conversational context makes visitors more willing to share their information because they feel like they are already talking to someone.
Where the Leads Go
Captured leads are sent to your team via email notification immediately after the conversation. The notification includes the visitor’s name, email, phone (if collected), the page they were on, and the full chat transcript.
For businesses with a CRM, leads can be routed directly into HubSpot, Salesforce, or any other CRM via an automation workflow. This means new leads appear in your pipeline automatically, tagged with the source and the conversation context, without anyone manually entering data.
Can It Qualify Leads Too?
Yes. Beyond basic contact collection, the chatbot can ask qualifying questions during the conversation. This is useful for businesses where not every inquiry is worth the same follow-up time. A law firm might want to know the type of legal matter. A contractor might want to know project size and timeline.
The chatbot asks these questions conversationally, records the answers, and includes them with the lead notification. Your team opens the notification and already knows whether this is a hot lead or a low-priority inquiry before they pick up the phone. To understand the full system behind this, see how an AI chatbot for customer service works. This is the most common upgrade I add after the first 60 days of data from a chatbot deployment, when I know exactly what your visitors are asking.
- What service are they asking about?
- What is their timeline?
- What is their approximate budget?
- Are they the decision-maker?
These questions are added only when they fit naturally into the conversation. A chatbot that feels like an interrogation loses the visitor’s trust quickly.