Copilot Compare Table
Centered heading over a comparison table whose ruled rows pit a generic chatbot against the built-in assistant, closed by a sourcing footnote.
Centered heading over a comparison table whose ruled rows pit a generic chatbot against the built-in assistant, closed by a sourcing footnote.
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Copilot Compare Table settles the objection every embedded assistant meets, why not just paste into a chatbot. A ruled table sets six jobs teams actually hire AI for against two columns, a generic browser chatbot marked with crosses and the built-in assistant marked with checks. Comparing on jobs rather than features is the move, it reframes the choice around outcomes the buyer already cares about.
The headline, why not just paste into a chatbot, names the cheaper alternative out loud rather than pretending it does not exist. Comparisons are one array of need, generic, and ours, and a footnote sources the left column to onboarding interviews so the contrast reads as reported, not invented.
Reach for this block on AI pages selling an assistant against free general purpose tools, and on comparison pages where the honest question deserves a direct answer. It is the section that converts a buyer already using a chatbot for the job.
A natural flow around it on a Marketing Pro page:
Before
After
One strong use is the real jobs your buyers hire AI for, set against the tool they reach for first. Other comparisons:
Tip: compare on the job, not the spec sheet, like the left column does. A feature grid convinces no one who has not already decided.